Foundation instead of in the original English.
\1f
-File: lispref.info, Node: Extents, Next: Specifiers, Prev: Abbrevs, Up: Top
+File: lispref.info, Node: Replacing Match, Next: Entire Match Data, Prev: Simple Match Data, Up: Match Data
+
+Replacing the Text That Matched
+-------------------------------
+
+ This function replaces the text matched by the last search with
+REPLACEMENT.
+
+ - Function: replace-match replacement &optional fixedcase literal
+ string strbuffer
+ This function replaces the text in the buffer (or in STRING) that
+ was matched by the last search. It replaces that text with
+ REPLACEMENT.
+
+ If you did the last search in a buffer, you should specify `nil'
+ for STRING. Then `replace-match' does the replacement by editing
+ the buffer; it leaves point at the end of the replacement text,
+ and returns `t'.
+
+ If you did the search in a string, pass the same string as STRING.
+ Then `replace-match' does the replacement by constructing and
+ returning a new string.
+
+ If the fourth argument STRING is a string, fifth argument
+ STRBUFFER specifies the buffer to be used for syntax-table and
+ case-table lookup and defaults to the current buffer. When STRING
+ is not a string, the buffer that the match occurred in has
+ automatically been remembered and you do not need to specify it.
+
+ If FIXEDCASE is non-`nil', then the case of the replacement text
+ is not changed; otherwise, the replacement text is converted to a
+ different case depending upon the capitalization of the text to be
+ replaced. If the original text is all upper case, the replacement
+ text is converted to upper case. If the first word of the
+ original text is capitalized, then the first word of the
+ replacement text is capitalized. If the original text contains
+ just one word, and that word is a capital letter, `replace-match'
+ considers this a capitalized first word rather than all upper case.
+
+ If `case-replace' is `nil', then case conversion is not done,
+ regardless of the value of FIXEDCASE. *Note Searching and Case::.
+
+ If LITERAL is non-`nil', then REPLACEMENT is inserted exactly as
+ it is, the only alterations being case changes as needed. If it
+ is `nil' (the default), then the character `\' is treated
+ specially. If a `\' appears in REPLACEMENT, then it must be part
+ of one of the following sequences:
+
+ `\&'
+ `\&' stands for the entire text being replaced.
+
+ `\N'
+ `\N', where N is a digit, stands for the text that matched
+ the Nth subexpression in the original regexp. Subexpressions
+ are those expressions grouped inside `\(...\)'.
+
+ `\\'
+ `\\' stands for a single `\' in the replacement text.
-Extents
-*******
+\1f
+File: lispref.info, Node: Entire Match Data, Next: Saving Match Data, Prev: Replacing Match, Up: Match Data
+
+Accessing the Entire Match Data
+-------------------------------
+
+ The functions `match-data' and `set-match-data' read or write the
+entire match data, all at once.
+
+ - Function: match-data &optional integers reuse
+ This function returns a newly constructed list containing all the
+ information on what text the last search matched. Element zero is
+ the position of the beginning of the match for the whole
+ expression; element one is the position of the end of the match
+ for the expression. The next two elements are the positions of
+ the beginning and end of the match for the first subexpression,
+ and so on. In general, element number 2N corresponds to
+ `(match-beginning N)'; and element number 2N + 1 corresponds to
+ `(match-end N)'.
+
+ All the elements are markers or `nil' if matching was done on a
+ buffer, and all are integers or `nil' if matching was done on a
+ string with `string-match'. However, if the optional first
+ argument INTEGERS is non-`nil', always use integers (rather than
+ markers) to represent buffer positions.
+
+ If the optional second argument REUSE is a list, reuse it as part
+ of the value. If REUSE is long enough to hold all the values, and
+ if INTEGERS is non-`nil', no new lisp objects are created.
+
+ As always, there must be no possibility of intervening searches
+ between the call to a search function and the call to `match-data'
+ that is intended to access the match data for that search.
+
+ (match-data)
+ => (#<marker at 9 in foo>
+ #<marker at 17 in foo>
+ #<marker at 13 in foo>
+ #<marker at 17 in foo>)
+
+ - Function: set-match-data match-list
+ This function sets the match data from the elements of MATCH-LIST,
+ which should be a list that was the value of a previous call to
+ `match-data'.
+
+ If MATCH-LIST refers to a buffer that doesn't exist, you don't get
+ an error; that sets the match data in a meaningless but harmless
+ way.
+
+ `store-match-data' is an alias for `set-match-data'.
+
+\1f
+File: lispref.info, Node: Saving Match Data, Prev: Entire Match Data, Up: Match Data
+
+Saving and Restoring the Match Data
+-----------------------------------
+
+ When you call a function that may do a search, you may need to save
+and restore the match data around that call, if you want to preserve the
+match data from an earlier search for later use. Here is an example
+that shows the problem that arises if you fail to save the match data:
+
+ (re-search-forward "The \\(cat \\)")
+ => 48
+ (foo) ; Perhaps `foo' does
+ ; more searching.
+ (match-end 0)
+ => 61 ; Unexpected result--not 48!
+
+ You can save and restore the match data with `save-match-data':
+
+ - Special Form: save-match-data body...
+ This special form executes BODY, saving and restoring the match
+ data around it.
+
+ You can use `set-match-data' together with `match-data' to imitate
+the effect of the special form `save-match-data'. This is useful for
+writing code that can run in Emacs 18. Here is how:
+
+ (let ((data (match-data)))
+ (unwind-protect
+ ... ; May change the original match data.
+ (set-match-data data)))
+
+ Emacs automatically saves and restores the match data when it runs
+process filter functions (*note Filter Functions::) and process
+sentinels (*note Sentinels::).
+
+\1f
+File: lispref.info, Node: Searching and Case, Next: Standard Regexps, Prev: Match Data, Up: Searching and Matching
+
+Searching and Case
+==================
- An "extent" is a region of text (a start position and an end
-position) that is displayed in a particular face and can have certain
-other properties such as being read-only. Extents can overlap each
-other. XEmacs efficiently handles buffers with large numbers of
-extents in them.
+ By default, searches in Emacs ignore the case of the text they are
+searching through; if you specify searching for `FOO', then `Foo' or
+`foo' is also considered a match. Regexps, and in particular character
+sets, are included: thus, `[aB]' would match `a' or `A' or `b' or `B'.
+
+ If you do not want this feature, set the variable `case-fold-search'
+to `nil'. Then all letters must match exactly, including case. This
+is a buffer-local variable; altering the variable affects only the
+current buffer. (*Note Intro to Buffer-Local::.) Alternatively, you
+may change the value of `default-case-fold-search', which is the
+default value of `case-fold-search' for buffers that do not override it.
+
+ Note that the user-level incremental search feature handles case
+distinctions differently. When given a lower case letter, it looks for
+a match of either case, but when given an upper case letter, it looks
+for an upper case letter only. But this has nothing to do with the
+searching functions Lisp functions use.
+
+ - User Option: case-replace
+ This variable determines whether the replacement functions should
+ preserve case. If the variable is `nil', that means to use the
+ replacement text verbatim. A non-`nil' value means to convert the
+ case of the replacement text according to the text being replaced.
+
+ The function `replace-match' is where this variable actually has
+ its effect. *Note Replacing Match::.
+
+ - User Option: case-fold-search
+ This buffer-local variable determines whether searches should
+ ignore case. If the variable is `nil' they do not ignore case;
+ otherwise they do ignore case.
+
+ - Variable: default-case-fold-search
+ The value of this variable is the default value for
+ `case-fold-search' in buffers that do not override it. This is the
+ same as `(default-value 'case-fold-search)'.
- - Function: extentp object
- This returns `t' if OBJECT is an extent.
+\1f
+File: lispref.info, Node: Standard Regexps, Prev: Searching and Case, Up: Searching and Matching
+
+Standard Regular Expressions Used in Editing
+============================================
+
+ This section describes some variables that hold regular expressions
+used for certain purposes in editing:
+
+ - Variable: page-delimiter
+ This is the regexp describing line-beginnings that separate pages.
+ The default value is `"^\014"' (i.e., `"^^L"' or `"^\C-l"'); this
+ matches a line that starts with a formfeed character.
+
+ The following two regular expressions should _not_ assume the match
+always starts at the beginning of a line; they should not use `^' to
+anchor the match. Most often, the paragraph commands do check for a
+match only at the beginning of a line, which means that `^' would be
+superfluous. When there is a nonzero left margin, they accept matches
+that start after the left margin. In that case, a `^' would be
+incorrect. However, a `^' is harmless in modes where a left margin is
+never used.
+
+ - Variable: paragraph-separate
+ This is the regular expression for recognizing the beginning of a
+ line that separates paragraphs. (If you change this, you may have
+ to change `paragraph-start' also.) The default value is
+ `"[ \t\f]*$"', which matches a line that consists entirely of
+ spaces, tabs, and form feeds (after its left margin).
+
+ - Variable: paragraph-start
+ This is the regular expression for recognizing the beginning of a
+ line that starts _or_ separates paragraphs. The default value is
+ `"[ \t\n\f]"', which matches a line starting with a space, tab,
+ newline, or form feed (after its left margin).
+
+ - Variable: sentence-end
+ This is the regular expression describing the end of a sentence.
+ (All paragraph boundaries also end sentences, regardless.) The
+ default value is:
+
+ "[.?!][]\"')}]*\\($\\| $\\|\t\\| \\)[ \t\n]*"
+
+ This means a period, question mark or exclamation mark, followed
+ optionally by a closing parenthetical character, followed by tabs,
+ spaces or new lines.
+
+ For a detailed explanation of this regular expression, see *Note
+ Regexp Example::.
+
+\1f
+File: lispref.info, Node: Syntax Tables, Next: Abbrevs, Prev: Searching and Matching, Up: Top
+
+Syntax Tables
+*************
+
+ A "syntax table" specifies the syntactic textual function of each
+character. This information is used by the parsing commands, the
+complex movement commands, and others to determine where words, symbols,
+and other syntactic constructs begin and end. The current syntax table
+controls the meaning of the word motion functions (*note Word Motion::)
+and the list motion functions (*note List Motion::) as well as the
+functions in this chapter.
* Menu:
-* Intro to Extents:: Extents are regions over a buffer or string.
-* Creating and Modifying Extents::
- Basic extent functions.
-* Extent Endpoints:: Accessing and setting the bounds of an extent.
-* Finding Extents:: Determining which extents are in an object.
-* Mapping Over Extents:: More sophisticated functions for extent scanning.
-* Extent Properties:: Extents have built-in and user-definable properties.
-* Detached Extents:: Extents that are not in a buffer.
-* Extent Parents:: Inheriting properties from another extent.
-* Duplicable Extents:: Extents can be marked to be copied into strings.
-* Extents and Events:: Extents can interact with the keyboard and mouse.
-* Atomic Extents:: Treating a block of text as a single entity.
+* Basics: Syntax Basics. Basic concepts of syntax tables.
+* Desc: Syntax Descriptors. How characters are classified.
+* Syntax Table Functions:: How to create, examine and alter syntax tables.
+* Motion and Syntax:: Moving over characters with certain syntaxes.
+* Parsing Expressions:: Parsing balanced expressions
+ using the syntax table.
+* Standard Syntax Tables:: Syntax tables used by various major modes.
+* Syntax Table Internals:: How syntax table information is stored.
\1f
-File: lispref.info, Node: Intro to Extents, Next: Creating and Modifying Extents, Up: Extents
+File: lispref.info, Node: Syntax Basics, Next: Syntax Descriptors, Up: Syntax Tables
-Introduction to Extents
-=======================
+Syntax Table Concepts
+=====================
- An extent is a region of text within a buffer or string that has
-certain properties associated with it. The properties of an extent
-primarily affect the way the text contained in the extent is displayed.
-Extents can freely overlap each other in a buffer or string. Extents
-are invisible to functions that merely examine the text of a buffer or
-string.
-
- _Please note:_ An alternative way to add properties to a buffer or
-string is to use text properties. *Note Text Properties::.
-
- An extent is logically a Lisp object consisting of a start position,
-an end position, a buffer or string to which these positions refer, and
-a property list. As text is inserted into a buffer, the start and end
-positions of the extent are automatically adjusted as necessary to keep
-the extent referring to the same text in the buffer. If text is
-inserted at the boundary of an extent, the extent's `start-open' and
-`end-open' properties control whether the text is included as part of
-the extent. If the text bounded by an extent is deleted, the extent
-becomes "detached"; its start and end positions are no longer
-meaningful, but it maintains all its other properties and can later be
-reinserted into a buffer. (None of these considerations apply to
-strings, because text cannot be inserted into or deleted from a string.)
-
- Each extent has a face or list of faces associated with it, which
-controls the way in which the text bounded by the extent is displayed.
-If an extent's face is `nil' or its properties are partially undefined,
-the corresponding properties from the default face for the frame is
-used. If two or more extents overlap, or if a list of more than one
-face is specified for a particular extent, the corresponding faces are
-merged to determine the text's displayed properties. Every extent has
-a "priority" that determines which face takes precedence if the faces
-conflict. (If two extents have the same priority, the one that comes
-later in the display order takes precedence. *Note display order:
-Extent Endpoints.) Higher-numbered priority values correspond to a
-higher priority, and priority values can be negative. Every extent is
-created with a priority of 0, but this can be changed with
-`set-extent-priority'. Within a single extent with a list of faces,
-faces earlier in the list have a higher priority than faces later in
-the list.
-
- Extents can be set to respond specially to key and mouse events
-within the extent. An extent's `keymap' property controls the effect of
-key and mouse strokes within the extent's text, and the `mouse-face'
-property controls whether the extent is highlighted when the mouse moves
-over it. *Note Extents and Events::.
-
- An extent can optionally have a "begin-glyph" or "end-glyph"
-associated with it. A begin-glyph or end-glyph is a pixmap or string
-that will be displayed either at the start or end of an extent or in the
-margin of the line that the start or end of the extent lies in,
-depending on the extent's layout policy. Begin-glyphs and end-glyphs
-are used to implement annotations, and you should use the annotation API
-functions in preference to the lower-level extent functions. For more
-information, *Note Annotations::.
-
- If an extent has its `detachable' property set, it will become
-"detached" (i.e. no longer in the buffer) when all its text its
-deleted. Otherwise, it will simply shrink down to zero-length and sit
-it the same place in the buffer. By default, the `detachable' property
-is set on newly-created extents. *Note Detached Extents::.
-
- If an extent has its `duplicable' property set, it will be
-remembered when a string is created from text bounded by the extent.
-When the string is re-inserted into a buffer, the extent will also be
-re-inserted. This mechanism is used in the kill, yank, and undo
-commands. *Note Duplicable Extents::.
+ A "syntax table" provides Emacs with the information that determines
+the syntactic use of each character in a buffer. This information is
+used by the parsing commands, the complex movement commands, and others
+to determine where words, symbols, and other syntactic constructs begin
+and end. The current syntax table controls the meaning of the word
+motion functions (*note Word Motion::) and the list motion functions
+(*note List Motion::) as well as the functions in this chapter.
+
+ Under XEmacs 20, a syntax table is a particular subtype of the
+primitive char table type (*note Char Tables::), and each element of the
+char table is an integer that encodes the syntax of the character in
+question, or a cons of such an integer and a matching character (for
+characters with parenthesis syntax).
+
+ Under XEmacs 19, a syntax table is a vector of 256 elements; it
+contains one entry for each of the 256 possible characters in an 8-bit
+byte. Each element is an integer that encodes the syntax of the
+character in question. (The matching character, if any, is embedded in
+the bits of this integer.)
+
+ Syntax tables are used only for moving across text, not for the Emacs
+Lisp reader. XEmacs Lisp uses built-in syntactic rules when reading
+Lisp expressions, and these rules cannot be changed.
+
+ Each buffer has its own major mode, and each major mode has its own
+idea of the syntactic class of various characters. For example, in Lisp
+mode, the character `;' begins a comment, but in C mode, it terminates
+a statement. To support these variations, XEmacs makes the choice of
+syntax table local to each buffer. Typically, each major mode has its
+own syntax table and installs that table in each buffer that uses that
+mode. Changing this table alters the syntax in all those buffers as
+well as in any buffers subsequently put in that mode. Occasionally
+several similar modes share one syntax table. *Note Example Major
+Modes::, for an example of how to set up a syntax table.
+
+ A syntax table can inherit the data for some characters from the
+standard syntax table, while specifying other characters itself. The
+"inherit" syntax class means "inherit this character's syntax from the
+standard syntax table." Most major modes' syntax tables inherit the
+syntax of character codes 0 through 31 and 128 through 255. This is
+useful with character sets such as ISO Latin-1 that have additional
+alphabetic characters in the range 128 to 255. Just changing the
+standard syntax for these characters affects all major modes.
+
+ - Function: syntax-table-p object
+ This function returns `t' if OBJECT is a vector of length 256
+ elements. This means that the vector may be a syntax table.
+ However, according to this test, any vector of length 256 is
+ considered to be a syntax table, no matter what its contents.
\1f
-File: lispref.info, Node: Creating and Modifying Extents, Next: Extent Endpoints, Prev: Intro to Extents, Up: Extents
-
-Creating and Modifying Extents
-==============================
-
- - Function: make-extent from to &optional object
- This function makes an extent for the range [FROM, TO) in OBJECT
- (a buffer or string). OBJECT defaults to the current buffer.
- Insertions at point TO will be outside of the extent; insertions
- at FROM will be inside the extent, causing the extent to grow
- (*note Extent Endpoints::). This is the same way that markers
- behave. The extent is initially detached if both FROM and TO are
- `nil', and in this case OBJECT defaults to `nil', meaning the
- extent is in no buffer or string (*note Detached Extents::).
-
- - Function: delete-extent extent
- This function removes EXTENT from its buffer and destroys it.
- This does not modify the buffer's text, only its display
- properties. The extent cannot be used thereafter. To remove an
- extent in such a way that it can be re-inserted later, use
- `detach-extent'. *Note Detached Extents::.
-
- - Function: extent-object extent
- This function returns the buffer or string that EXTENT is in. If
- the return value is `nil', this means that the extent is detached;
- however, a detached extent will not necessarily return a value of
- `nil'.
-
- - Function: extent-live-p extent
- This function returns `nil' if EXTENT is deleted, and `t'
- otherwise.
+File: lispref.info, Node: Syntax Descriptors, Next: Syntax Table Functions, Prev: Syntax Basics, Up: Syntax Tables
+
+Syntax Descriptors
+==================
+
+ This section describes the syntax classes and flags that denote the
+syntax of a character, and how they are represented as a "syntax
+descriptor", which is a Lisp string that you pass to
+`modify-syntax-entry' to specify the desired syntax.
+
+ XEmacs defines a number of "syntax classes". Each syntax table puts
+each character into one class. There is no necessary relationship
+between the class of a character in one syntax table and its class in
+any other table.
+
+ Each class is designated by a mnemonic character, which serves as the
+name of the class when you need to specify a class. Usually the
+designator character is one that is frequently in that class; however,
+its meaning as a designator is unvarying and independent of what syntax
+that character currently has.
+
+ A syntax descriptor is a Lisp string that specifies a syntax class, a
+matching character (used only for the parenthesis classes) and flags.
+The first character is the designator for a syntax class. The second
+character is the character to match; if it is unused, put a space there.
+Then come the characters for any desired flags. If no matching
+character or flags are needed, one character is sufficient.
+
+ For example, the descriptor for the character `*' in C mode is
+`. 23' (i.e., punctuation, matching character slot unused, second
+character of a comment-starter, first character of an comment-ender),
+and the entry for `/' is `. 14' (i.e., punctuation, matching character
+slot unused, first character of a comment-starter, second character of
+a comment-ender).
+
+* Menu:
+
+* Syntax Class Table:: Table of syntax classes.
+* Syntax Flags:: Additional flags each character can have.
\1f
-File: lispref.info, Node: Extent Endpoints, Next: Finding Extents, Prev: Creating and Modifying Extents, Up: Extents
+File: lispref.info, Node: Syntax Class Table, Next: Syntax Flags, Up: Syntax Descriptors
+
+Table of Syntax Classes
+-----------------------
+
+ Here is a table of syntax classes, the characters that stand for
+them, their meanings, and examples of their use.
+
+ - Syntax class: whitespace character
+ "Whitespace characters" (designated with ` ' or `-') separate
+ symbols and words from each other. Typically, whitespace
+ characters have no other syntactic significance, and multiple
+ whitespace characters are syntactically equivalent to a single
+ one. Space, tab, newline and formfeed are almost always
+ classified as whitespace.
+
+ - Syntax class: word constituent
+ "Word constituents" (designated with `w') are parts of normal
+ English words and are typically used in variable and command names
+ in programs. All upper- and lower-case letters, and the digits,
+ are typically word constituents.
+
+ - Syntax class: symbol constituent
+ "Symbol constituents" (designated with `_') are the extra
+ characters that are used in variable and command names along with
+ word constituents. For example, the symbol constituents class is
+ used in Lisp mode to indicate that certain characters may be part
+ of symbol names even though they are not part of English words.
+ These characters are `$&*+-_<>'. In standard C, the only
+ non-word-constituent character that is valid in symbols is
+ underscore (`_').
+
+ - Syntax class: punctuation character
+ "Punctuation characters" (`.') are those characters that are used
+ as punctuation in English, or are used in some way in a programming
+ language to separate symbols from one another. Most programming
+ language modes, including Emacs Lisp mode, have no characters in
+ this class since the few characters that are not symbol or word
+ constituents all have other uses.
+
+ - Syntax class: open parenthesis character
+ - Syntax class: close parenthesis character
+ Open and close "parenthesis characters" are characters used in
+ dissimilar pairs to surround sentences or expressions. Such a
+ grouping is begun with an open parenthesis character and
+ terminated with a close. Each open parenthesis character matches
+ a particular close parenthesis character, and vice versa.
+ Normally, XEmacs indicates momentarily the matching open
+ parenthesis when you insert a close parenthesis. *Note Blinking::.
+
+ The class of open parentheses is designated with `(', and that of
+ close parentheses with `)'.
+
+ In English text, and in C code, the parenthesis pairs are `()',
+ `[]', and `{}'. In XEmacs Lisp, the delimiters for lists and
+ vectors (`()' and `[]') are classified as parenthesis characters.
+
+ - Syntax class: string quote
+ "String quote characters" (designated with `"') are used in many
+ languages, including Lisp and C, to delimit string constants. The
+ same string quote character appears at the beginning and the end
+ of a string. Such quoted strings do not nest.
+
+ The parsing facilities of XEmacs consider a string as a single
+ token. The usual syntactic meanings of the characters in the
+ string are suppressed.
+
+ The Lisp modes have two string quote characters: double-quote (`"')
+ and vertical bar (`|'). `|' is not used in XEmacs Lisp, but it is
+ used in Common Lisp. C also has two string quote characters:
+ double-quote for strings, and single-quote (`'') for character
+ constants.
+
+ English text has no string quote characters because English is not
+ a programming language. Although quotation marks are used in
+ English, we do not want them to turn off the usual syntactic
+ properties of other characters in the quotation.
+
+ - Syntax class: escape
+ An "escape character" (designated with `\') starts an escape
+ sequence such as is used in C string and character constants. The
+ character `\' belongs to this class in both C and Lisp. (In C, it
+ is used thus only inside strings, but it turns out to cause no
+ trouble to treat it this way throughout C code.)
+
+ Characters in this class count as part of words if
+ `words-include-escapes' is non-`nil'. *Note Word Motion::.
+
+ - Syntax class: character quote
+ A "character quote character" (designated with `/') quotes the
+ following character so that it loses its normal syntactic meaning.
+ This differs from an escape character in that only the character
+ immediately following is ever affected.
+
+ Characters in this class count as part of words if
+ `words-include-escapes' is non-`nil'. *Note Word Motion::.
+
+ This class is used for backslash in TeX mode.
+
+ - Syntax class: paired delimiter
+ "Paired delimiter characters" (designated with `$') are like
+ string quote characters except that the syntactic properties of the
+ characters between the delimiters are not suppressed. Only TeX
+ mode uses a paired delimiter presently--the `$' that both enters
+ and leaves math mode.
+
+ - Syntax class: expression prefix
+ An "expression prefix operator" (designated with `'') is used for
+ syntactic operators that are part of an expression if they appear
+ next to one. These characters in Lisp include the apostrophe, `''
+ (used for quoting), the comma, `,' (used in macros), and `#' (used
+ in the read syntax for certain data types).
+
+ - Syntax class: comment starter
+ - Syntax class: comment ender
+ The "comment starter" and "comment ender" characters are used in
+ various languages to delimit comments. These classes are
+ designated with `<' and `>', respectively.
+
+ English text has no comment characters. In Lisp, the semicolon
+ (`;') starts a comment and a newline or formfeed ends one.
+
+ - Syntax class: inherit
+ This syntax class does not specify a syntax. It says to look in
+ the standard syntax table to find the syntax of this character.
+ The designator for this syntax code is `@'.
-Extent Endpoints
-================
+\1f
+File: lispref.info, Node: Syntax Flags, Prev: Syntax Class Table, Up: Syntax Descriptors
- Every extent has a start position and an end position, and logically
-affects the characters between those positions. Normally the start and
-end positions must both be valid positions in the extent's buffer or
-string. However, both endpoints can be `nil', meaning the extent is
-detached. *Note Detached Extents::.
-
- Whether the extent overlaps its endpoints is governed by its
-`start-open' and `end-open' properties. Insertion of a character at a
-closed endpoint will expand the extent to include that character;
-insertion at an open endpoint will not. Similarly, functions such as
-`extent-at' that scan over all extents overlapping a particular
-position will include extents with a closed endpoint at that position,
-but not extents with an open endpoint.
-
- Note that the `start-closed' and `end-closed' properties are
-equivalent to `start-open' and `end-open' with the opposite sense.
-
- Both endpoints can be equal, in which case the extent includes no
-characters but still exists in the buffer or string. Zero-length
-extents are used to represent annotations (*note Annotations::) and can
-be used as a more powerful form of a marker. Deletion of all the
-characters in an extent may or may not result in a zero-length extent;
-this depends on the `detachable' property (*note Detached Extents::).
-Insertion at the position of a zero-length extent expands the extent if
-both endpoints are closed; goes before the extent if it has the
-`start-open' property; and goes after the extent if it has the
-`end-open' property. Zero-length extents with both the `start-open'
-and `end-open' properties are treated as if their starting point were
-closed. Deletion of a character on a side of a zero-length extent
-whose corresponding endpoint is closed causes the extent to be detached
-if its `detachable' property is set; if the corresponding endpoint is
-open, the extent remains in the buffer, moving as necessary.
-
- Extents are ordered within a buffer or string by increasing start
-position, and then by decreasing end position (this is called the
-"display order").
-
- - Function: extent-start-position extent
- This function returns the start position of EXTENT.
-
- - Function: extent-end-position extent
- This function returns the end position of EXTENT.
-
- - Function: extent-length extent
- This function returns the length of EXTENT in characters. If the
- extent is detached, this returns `0'. If the extent is not
- detached, this is equivalent to
- (- (extent-end-position EXTENT) (extent-start-position EXTENT))
-
- - Function: set-extent-endpoints extent start end &optional
- buffer-or-string
- This function sets the start and end position of EXTENT to START
- and END. If both are `nil', this is equivalent to `detach-extent'.
-
- BUFFER-OR-STRING specifies the new buffer or string that the
- extent should be in, and defaults to EXTENT's buffer or string.
- (If `nil', and EXTENT is in no buffer and no string, it defaults
- to the current buffer.)
-
- See documentation on `detach-extent' for a discussion of undo
- recording.
+Syntax Flags
+------------
+
+ In addition to the classes, entries for characters in a syntax table
+can include flags. There are six possible flags, represented by the
+characters `1', `2', `3', `4', `b' and `p'.
+
+ All the flags except `p' are used to describe multi-character
+comment delimiters. The digit flags indicate that a character can
+_also_ be part of a comment sequence, in addition to the syntactic
+properties associated with its character class. The flags are
+independent of the class and each other for the sake of characters such
+as `*' in C mode, which is a punctuation character, _and_ the second
+character of a start-of-comment sequence (`/*'), _and_ the first
+character of an end-of-comment sequence (`*/').
+
+ The flags for a character C are:
+
+ * `1' means C is the start of a two-character comment-start sequence.
+
+ * `2' means C is the second character of such a sequence.
+
+ * `3' means C is the start of a two-character comment-end sequence.
+
+ * `4' means C is the second character of such a sequence.
+
+ * `b' means that C as a comment delimiter belongs to the alternative
+ "b" comment style.
+
+ Emacs supports two comment styles simultaneously in any one syntax
+ table. This is for the sake of C++. Each style of comment syntax
+ has its own comment-start sequence and its own comment-end
+ sequence. Each comment must stick to one style or the other;
+ thus, if it starts with the comment-start sequence of style "b",
+ it must also end with the comment-end sequence of style "b".
+
+ The two comment-start sequences must begin with the same
+ character; only the second character may differ. Mark the second
+ character of the "b"-style comment-start sequence with the `b'
+ flag.
+
+ A comment-end sequence (one or two characters) applies to the "b"
+ style if its first character has the `b' flag set; otherwise, it
+ applies to the "a" style.
+
+ The appropriate comment syntax settings for C++ are as follows:
+
+ `/'
+ `124b'
+
+ `*'
+ `23'
+
+ newline
+ `>b'
+
+ This defines four comment-delimiting sequences:
+
+ `/*'
+ This is a comment-start sequence for "a" style because the
+ second character, `*', does not have the `b' flag.
+
+ `//'
+ This is a comment-start sequence for "b" style because the
+ second character, `/', does have the `b' flag.
+
+ `*/'
+ This is a comment-end sequence for "a" style because the first
+ character, `*', does not have the `b' flag
+
+ newline
+ This is a comment-end sequence for "b" style, because the
+ newline character has the `b' flag.
+
+ * `p' identifies an additional "prefix character" for Lisp syntax.
+ These characters are treated as whitespace when they appear between
+ expressions. When they appear within an expression, they are
+ handled according to their usual syntax codes.
+
+ The function `backward-prefix-chars' moves back over these
+ characters, as well as over characters whose primary syntax class
+ is prefix (`''). *Note Motion and Syntax::.
\1f
-File: lispref.info, Node: Finding Extents, Next: Mapping Over Extents, Prev: Extent Endpoints, Up: Extents
-
-Finding Extents
-===============
-
- The following functions provide a simple way of determining the
-extents in a buffer or string. A number of more sophisticated
-primitives for mapping over the extents in a range of a buffer or string
-are also provided (*note Mapping Over Extents::). When reading through
-this section, keep in mind the way that extents are ordered (*note
-Extent Endpoints::).
-
- - Function: extent-list &optional buffer-or-string from to flags
- This function returns a list of the extents in BUFFER-OR-STRING.
- BUFFER-OR-STRING defaults to the current buffer if omitted. FROM
- and TO can be used to limit the range over which extents are
- returned; if omitted, all extents in the buffer or string are
- returned.
-
- More specifically, if a range is specified using FROM and TO, only
- extents that overlap the range (i.e. begin or end inside of the
- range) are included in the list. FROM and TO default to the
- beginning and end of BUFFER-OR-STRING, respectively.
-
- FLAGS controls how end cases are treated. For a discussion of
- this, and exactly what "overlap" means, see `map-extents'.
-
- Functions that create extents must be prepared for the possibility
-that there are other extents in the same area, created by other
-functions. To deal with this, functions typically mark their own
-extents by setting a particular property on them. The following
-function makes it easier to locate those extents.
-
- - Function: extent-at pos &optional object property before at-flag
- This function finds the "smallest" extent (i.e., the last one in
- the display order) at (i.e., overlapping) POS in OBJECT (a buffer
- or string) having PROPERTY set. OBJECT defaults to the current
- buffer. PROPERTY defaults to `nil', meaning that any extent will
- do. Returns `nil' if there is no matching extent at POS. If the
- fourth argument BEFORE is not `nil', it must be an extent; any
- returned extent will precede that extent. This feature allows
- `extent-at' to be used by a loop over extents.
-
- AT-FLAG controls how end cases are handled (i.e. what "at" really
- means), and should be one of:
-
- `nil'
-
- `after'
- An extent is at POS if it covers the character after POS.
- This is consistent with the way that text properties work.
-
- `before'
- An extent is at POS if it covers the character before POS.
-
- `at'
- An extent is at POS if it overlaps or abuts POS. This
- includes all zero-length extents at POS.
-
- Note that in all cases, the start-openness and end-openness of the
- extents considered is ignored. If you want to pay attention to
- those properties, you should use `map-extents', which gives you
- more control.
-
- The following low-level functions are provided for explicitly
-traversing the extents in a buffer according to the display order.
-These functions are mostly intended for debugging--in normal operation,
-you should probably use `mapcar-extents' or `map-extents', or loop
-using the BEFORE argument to `extent-at', rather than creating a loop
-using `next-extent'.
-
- - Function: next-extent extent
- Given an extent EXTENT, this function returns the next extent in
- the buffer or string's display order. If EXTENT is a buffer or
- string, this returns the first extent in the buffer or string.
-
- - Function: previous-extent extent
- Given an extent EXTENT, this function returns the previous extent
- in the buffer or string's display order. If EXTENT is a buffer or
- string, this returns the last extent in the buffer or string.
+File: lispref.info, Node: Syntax Table Functions, Next: Motion and Syntax, Prev: Syntax Descriptors, Up: Syntax Tables
+
+Syntax Table Functions
+======================
+
+ In this section we describe functions for creating, accessing and
+altering syntax tables.
+
+ - Function: make-syntax-table &optional oldtable
+ This function creates a new syntax table. Character codes 0
+ through 31 and 128 through 255 are set up to inherit from the
+ standard syntax table. The other character codes are set up by
+ copying what the standard syntax table says about them.
+
+ Most major mode syntax tables are created in this way.
+
+ - Function: copy-syntax-table &optional syntax-table
+ This function constructs a copy of SYNTAX-TABLE and returns it.
+ If SYNTAX-TABLE is not supplied (or is `nil'), it returns a copy
+ of the current syntax table. Otherwise, an error is signaled if
+ SYNTAX-TABLE is not a syntax table.
+
+ - Command: modify-syntax-entry char-range syntax-descriptor &optional
+ syntax-table
+ This function sets the syntax entry for CHAR-RANGE according to
+ SYNTAX-DESCRIPTOR. CHAR-RANGE is either a single character or a
+ range of characters, as used with `put-char-table'. The syntax is
+ changed only for SYNTAX-TABLE, which defaults to the current
+ buffer's syntax table, and not in any other syntax table. The
+ argument SYNTAX-DESCRIPTOR specifies the desired syntax; this is a
+ string beginning with a class designator character, and optionally
+ containing a matching character and flags as well. *Note Syntax
+ Descriptors::.
+
+ This function always returns `nil'. The old syntax information in
+ the table for CHAR-RANGE is discarded.
+
+ An error is signaled if the first character of the syntax
+ descriptor is not one of the twelve syntax class designator
+ characters.
+
+ Examples:
+
+ ;; Put the space character in class whitespace.
+ (modify-syntax-entry ?\ " ")
+ => nil
+
+ ;; Make `$' an open parenthesis character,
+ ;; with `^' as its matching close.
+ (modify-syntax-entry ?$ "(^")
+ => nil
+
+ ;; Make `^' a close parenthesis character,
+ ;; with `$' as its matching open.
+ (modify-syntax-entry ?^ ")$")
+ => nil
+
+ ;; Make `/' a punctuation character,
+ ;; the first character of a start-comment sequence,
+ ;; and the second character of an end-comment sequence.
+ ;; This is used in C mode.
+ (modify-syntax-entry ?/ ". 14")
+ => nil
+
+ - Function: char-syntax character &optional syntax-table
+ This function returns the syntax class of CHARACTER, represented
+ by its mnemonic designator character. This _only_ returns the
+ class, not any matching parenthesis or flags.
+
+ An error is signaled if CHARACTER is not a character.
+
+ The characters that correspond to various syntax codes are listed
+ in the documentation of `modify-syntax-entry'.
+
+ Optional second argument SYNTAX-TABLE is the syntax table to be
+ used, and defaults to the current buffer's syntax table.
+
+ The following examples apply to C mode. The first example shows
+ that the syntax class of space is whitespace (represented by a
+ space). The second example shows that the syntax of `/' is
+ punctuation. This does not show the fact that it is also part of
+ comment-start and -end sequences. The third example shows that
+ open parenthesis is in the class of open parentheses. This does
+ not show the fact that it has a matching character, `)'.
+
+ (char-to-string (char-syntax ?\ ))
+ => " "
+
+ (char-to-string (char-syntax ?/))
+ => "."
+
+ (char-to-string (char-syntax ?\())
+ => "("
+
+ - Function: set-syntax-table syntax-table &optional buffer
+ This function makes SYNTAX-TABLE the syntax table for BUFFER, which
+ defaults to the current buffer if omitted. It returns
+ SYNTAX-TABLE.
+
+ - Function: syntax-table &optional buffer
+ This function returns the syntax table for BUFFER, which defaults
+ to the current buffer if omitted.
\1f
-File: lispref.info, Node: Mapping Over Extents, Next: Extent Properties, Prev: Finding Extents, Up: Extents
-
-Mapping Over Extents
-====================
-
- The most basic and general function for mapping over extents is
-called `map-extents'. You should read through the definition of this
-function to familiarize yourself with the concepts and optional
-arguments involved. However, in practice you may find it more
-convenient to use the function `mapcar-extents' or to create a loop
-using the `before' argument to `extent-at' (*note Finding Extents::).
-
- - Function: map-extents function &optional object from to maparg flags
- property value
- This function maps FUNCTION over the extents which overlap a
- region in OBJECT. OBJECT is normally a buffer or string but could
- be an extent (see below). The region is normally bounded by
- [FROM, TO) (i.e. the beginning of the region is closed and the end
- of the region is open), but this can be changed with the FLAGS
- argument (see below for a complete discussion).
-
- FUNCTION is called with the arguments (extent, MAPARG). The
- arguments OBJECT, FROM, TO, MAPARG, and FLAGS are all optional and
- default to the current buffer, the beginning of OBJECT, the end of
- OBJECT, NIL, and NIL, respectively. `map-extents' returns the
- first non-`nil' result produced by FUNCTION, and no more calls to
- FUNCTION are made after it returns non-`nil'.
-
- If OBJECT is an extent, FROM and TO default to the extent's
- endpoints, and the mapping omits that extent and its predecessors.
- This feature supports restarting a loop based on `map-extents'.
- Note: OBJECT must be attached to a buffer or string, and the
- mapping is done over that buffer or string.
-
- An extent overlaps the region if there is any point in the extent
- that is also in the region. (For the purpose of overlap,
- zero-length extents and regions are treated as closed on both ends
- regardless of their endpoints' specified open/closedness.) Note
- that the endpoints of an extent or region are considered to be in
- that extent or region if and only if the corresponding end is
- closed. For example, the extent [5,7] overlaps the region [2,5]
- because 5 is in both the extent and the region. However, (5,7]
- does not overlap [2,5] because 5 is not in the extent, and neither
- [5,7] nor (5,7] overlaps the region [2,5) because 5 is not in the
- region.
-
- The optional FLAGS can be a symbol or a list of one or more
- symbols, modifying the behavior of `map-extents'. Allowed symbols
- are:
-
- `end-closed'
- The region's end is closed.
-
- `start-open'
- The region's start is open.
-
- `all-extents-closed'
- Treat all extents as closed on both ends for the purpose of
- determining whether they overlap the region, irrespective of
- their actual open- or closedness.
-
- `all-extents-open'
- Treat all extents as open on both ends.
-
- `all-extents-closed-open'
- Treat all extents as start-closed, end-open.
-
- `all-extents-open-closed'
- Treat all extents as start-open, end-closed.
-
- `start-in-region'
- In addition to the above conditions for extent overlap, the
- extent's start position must lie within the specified region.
- Note that, for this condition, open start positions are
- treated as if 0.5 was added to the endpoint's value, and open
- end positions are treated as if 0.5 was subtracted from the
- endpoint's value.
-
- `end-in-region'
- The extent's end position must lie within the region.
-
- `start-and-end-in-region'
- Both the extent's start and end positions must lie within the
- region.
-
- `start-or-end-in-region'
- Either the extent's start or end position must lie within the
- region.
-
- `negate-in-region'
- The condition specified by a `*-in-region' flag must _not_
- hold for the extent to be considered.
-
- At most one of `all-extents-closed', `all-extents-open',
- `all-extents-closed-open', and `all-extents-open-closed' may be
- specified.
-
- At most one of `start-in-region', `end-in-region',
- `start-and-end-in-region', and `start-or-end-in-region' may be
- specified.
-
- If optional arg PROPERTY is non-`nil', only extents with that
- property set on them will be visited. If optional arg VALUE is
- non-`nil', only extents whose value for that property is `eq' to
- VALUE will be visited.
-
- If you want to map over extents and accumulate a list of results,
-the following function may be more convenient than `map-extents'.
-
- - Function: mapcar-extents function &optional predicate
- buffer-or-string from to flags property value
- This function applies FUNCTION to all extents which overlap a
- region in BUFFER-OR-STRING. The region is delimited by FROM and
- TO. FUNCTION is called with one argument, the extent. A list of
- the values returned by FUNCTION is returned. An optional
- PREDICATE may be used to further limit the extents over which
- FUNCTION is mapped. The optional arguments FLAGS, PROPERTY, and
- VALUE may also be used to control the extents passed to PREDICATE
- or FUNCTION, and have the same meaning as in `map-extents'.
-
- - Function: map-extent-children function &optional object from to
- maparg flags property value
- This function is similar to `map-extents', but differs in that:
-
- * It only visits extents which start in the given region.
-
- * After visiting an extent E, it skips all other extents which
- start inside E but end before E's end.
-
- Thus, this function may be used to walk a tree of extents in a
- buffer:
- (defun walk-extents (buffer &optional ignore)
- (map-extent-children 'walk-extents buffer))
-
- - Function: extent-in-region-p extent &optional from to flags
- This function returns T if `map-extents' would visit EXTENT if
- called with the given arguments.
+File: lispref.info, Node: Motion and Syntax, Next: Parsing Expressions, Prev: Syntax Table Functions, Up: Syntax Tables
+
+Motion and Syntax
+=================
+
+ This section describes functions for moving across characters in
+certain syntax classes. None of these functions exists in Emacs
+version 18 or earlier.
+
+ - Function: skip-syntax-forward syntaxes &optional limit buffer
+ This function moves point forward across characters having syntax
+ classes mentioned in SYNTAXES. It stops when it encounters the
+ end of the buffer, or position LIMIT (if specified), or a
+ character it is not supposed to skip. Optional argument BUFFER
+ defaults to the current buffer if omitted.
+
+ - Function: skip-syntax-backward syntaxes &optional limit buffer
+ This function moves point backward across characters whose syntax
+ classes are mentioned in SYNTAXES. It stops when it encounters
+ the beginning of the buffer, or position LIMIT (if specified), or a
+ character it is not supposed to skip. Optional argument BUFFER
+ defaults to the current buffer if omitted.
+
+
+ - Function: backward-prefix-chars &optional buffer
+ This function moves point backward over any number of characters
+ with expression prefix syntax. This includes both characters in
+ the expression prefix syntax class, and characters with the `p'
+ flag. Optional argument BUFFER defaults to the current buffer if
+ omitted.
\1f
-File: lispref.info, Node: Extent Properties, Next: Detached Extents, Prev: Mapping Over Extents, Up: Extents
+File: lispref.info, Node: Parsing Expressions, Next: Standard Syntax Tables, Prev: Motion and Syntax, Up: Syntax Tables
-Properties of Extents
-=====================
+Parsing Balanced Expressions
+============================
- Each extent has a property list associating property names with
-values. Some property names have predefined meanings, and can usually
-only assume particular values. Assigning other values to such a
-property either cause the value to be converted into a legal value
-(e.g., assigning anything but `nil' to a Boolean property will cause
-the value of `t' to be assigned to the property) or will cause an
-error. Property names without predefined meanings can be assigned any
-value. An undefined property is equivalent to a property with a value
-of `nil', or with a particular default value in the case of properties
-with predefined meanings. Note that, when an extent is created, the
-`end-open' and `detachable' properties are set on it.
-
- If an extent has a parent, all of its properties actually derive
-from that parent (or from the root ancestor if the parent in turn has a
-parent), and setting a property of the extent actually sets that
-property on the parent. *Note Extent Parents::.
-
- - Function: extent-property extent property
- This function returns the value of PROPERTY in EXTENT. If
- PROPERTY is undefined, `nil' is returned.
-
- - Function: extent-properties extent
- This function returns a list of all of EXTENT's properties that do
- not have the value of `nil' (or the default value, for properties
- with predefined meanings).
-
- - Function: set-extent-property extent property value
- This function sets PROPERTY to VALUE in EXTENT. (If PROPERTY has a
- predefined meaning, only certain values are allowed, and some
- values may be converted to others before being stored.)
-
- - Function: set-extent-properties extent plist
- Change some properties of EXTENT. PLIST is a property list. This
- is useful to change many extent properties at once.
-
- The following table lists the properties with predefined meanings,
-along with their allowable values.
-
-`detached'
- (Boolean) Whether the extent is detached. Setting this is the
- same as calling `detach-extent'. *Note Detached Extents::.
-
-`destroyed'
- (Boolean) Whether the extent has been deleted. Setting this is
- the same as calling `delete-extent'.
-
-`priority'
- (integer) The extent's redisplay priority. Defaults to 0. *Note
- priority: Intro to Extents. This property can also be set with
- `set-extent-priority' and accessed with `extent-priority'.
-
-`start-open'
- (Boolean) Whether the start position of the extent is open,
- meaning that characters inserted at that position go outside of
- the extent. *Note Extent Endpoints::.
-
-`start-closed'
- (Boolean) Same as `start-open' but with the opposite sense.
- Setting this property clears `start-open' and vice-versa.
-
-`end-open'
- (Boolean) Whether the end position of the extent is open, meaning
- that characters inserted at that position go outside of the
- extent. This is `t' by default. *Note Extent Endpoints::.
-
-`end-closed'
- (Boolean) Same as `end-open' but with the opposite sense. Setting
- this property clears `end-open' and vice-versa.
-
-`read-only'
- (Boolean) Whether text within this extent will be unmodifiable.
-
-`face'
- (face, face name, list of faces or face names, or `nil') The face
- in which to display the extent's text. This property can also be
- set with `set-extent-face' and accessed with `extent-face'. Note
- that if a list of faces is specified, the faces are merged
- together, with faces earlier in the list having priority over
- faces later in the list.
-
-`mouse-face'
- (face, face name, list of faces or face names, or `nil') The face
- used to display the extent when the mouse moves over it. This
- property can also be set with `set-extent-mouse-face' and accessed
- with `extent-mouse-face'. Note that if a list of faces is
- specified, the faces are merged together, with faces earlier in
- the list having priority over faces later in the list. *Note
- Extents and Events::.
-
-`pointer'
- (pointer glyph) The glyph used as the pointer when the mouse
- moves over the extent. This takes precedence over the
- `text-pointer-glyph' and `nontext-pointer-glyph' variables. If
- for any reason this glyph is an invalid pointer, the standard
- glyphs will be used as fallbacks. *Note Mouse Pointer::.
-
-`detachable'
- (Boolean) Whether this extent becomes detached when all of the
- text it covers is deleted. This is `t' by default. *Note
- Detached Extents::.
-
-`duplicable'
- (Boolean) Whether this extent should be copied into strings, so
- that kill, yank, and undo commands will restore or copy it. *Note
- Duplicable Extents::.
-
-`unique'
- (Boolean) Meaningful only in conjunction with `duplicable'. When
- this is set, there may be only one instance of this extent
- attached at a time. *Note Duplicable Extents::.
-
-`invisible'
- (Boolean) If `t', text under this extent will not be displayed -
- it will look as if the text is not there at all.
-
-`keymap'
- (keymap or `nil') This keymap is consulted for mouse clicks on this
- extent or keypresses made while `point' is within the extent.
- *Note Extents and Events::.
-
-`copy-function'
- This is a hook that is run when a duplicable extent is about to be
- copied from a buffer to a string (or the kill ring). *Note
- Duplicable Extents::.
-
-`paste-function'
- This is a hook that is run when a duplicable extent is about to be
- copied from a string (or the kill ring) into a buffer. *Note
- Duplicable Extents::.
-
-`begin-glyph'
- (glyph or `nil') This extent's begin glyph. *Note Annotations::.
-
-`end-glyph'
- (glyph or `nil') This extent's end glyph. *Note Annotations::.
-
-`begin-glyph-layout'
- (`text', `whitespace', `inside-margin', or `outside-margin') The
- layout policy for this extent's begin glyph. Defaults to `text'.
- *Note Annotations::.
-
-`end-glyph-layout'
- (`text', `whitespace', `inside-margin', or `outside-margin') The
- layout policy for this extent's end glyph. Defaults to `text'.
- *Note Annotations::.
-
-`initial-redisplay-function'
- (any funcallable object) The function to be called the first time
- (a part of) the extent is redisplayed. It will be called with the
- extent as its argument.
-
- This is used by `lazy-shot' to implement lazy font-locking. The
- functionality is still experimental, and may change without further
- notice.
-
- The following convenience functions are provided for accessing
-particular properties of an extent.
-
- - Function: extent-face extent
- This function returns the `face' property of EXTENT. This might
- also return a list of face names. Do not modify this list
- directly! Instead, use `set-extent-face'.
-
- Note that you can use `eq' to compare lists of faces as returned
- by `extent-face'. In other words, if you set the face of two
- different extents to two lists that are `equal' but not `eq', then
- the return value of `extent-face' on the two extents will return
- the identical list.
-
- - Function: extent-mouse-face extent
- This function returns the `mouse-face' property of EXTENT. This
- might also return a list of face names. Do not modify this list
- directly! Instead, use `set-extent-mouse-face'.
-
- Note that you can use `eq' to compare lists of faces as returned
- by `extent-mouse-face', just like for `extent-face'.
-
- - Function: extent-priority extent
- This function returns the `priority' property of EXTENT.
-
- - Function: extent-keymap extent
- This function returns the `keymap' property of EXTENT.
-
- - Function: extent-begin-glyph-layout extent
- This function returns the `begin-glyph-layout' property of EXTENT,
- i.e. the layout policy associated with the EXTENT's begin glyph.
-
- - Function: extent-end-glyph-layout extent
- This function returns the `end-glyph-layout' property of EXTENT,
- i.e. the layout policy associated with the EXTENT's end glyph.
-
- - Function: extent-begin-glyph extent
- This function returns the `begin-glyph' property of EXTENT, i.e.
- the glyph object displayed at the beginning of EXTENT. If there
- is none, `nil' is returned.
-
- - Function: extent-end-glyph extent
- This function returns the `end-glyph' property of EXTENT, i.e. the
- glyph object displayed at the end of EXTENT. If there is none,
+ Here are several functions for parsing and scanning balanced
+expressions, also known as "sexps", in which parentheses match in
+pairs. The syntax table controls the interpretation of characters, so
+these functions can be used for Lisp expressions when in Lisp mode and
+for C expressions when in C mode. *Note List Motion::, for convenient
+higher-level functions for moving over balanced expressions.
+
+ - Function: parse-partial-sexp start limit &optional target-depth
+ stop-before state stop-comment buffer
+ This function parses a sexp in the current buffer starting at
+ START, not scanning past LIMIT. It stops at position LIMIT or
+ when certain criteria described below are met, and sets point to
+ the location where parsing stops. It returns a value describing
+ the status of the parse at the point where it stops.
+
+ If STATE is `nil', START is assumed to be at the top level of
+ parenthesis structure, such as the beginning of a function
+ definition. Alternatively, you might wish to resume parsing in the
+ middle of the structure. To do this, you must provide a STATE
+ argument that describes the initial status of parsing.
+
+ If the third argument TARGET-DEPTH is non-`nil', parsing stops if
+ the depth in parentheses becomes equal to TARGET-DEPTH. The depth
+ starts at 0, or at whatever is given in STATE.
+
+ If the fourth argument STOP-BEFORE is non-`nil', parsing stops
+ when it comes to any character that starts a sexp. If
+ STOP-COMMENT is non-`nil', parsing stops when it comes to the
+ start of a comment.
+
+ The fifth argument STATE is an eight-element list of the same form
+ as the value of this function, described below. The return value
+ of one call may be used to initialize the state of the parse on
+ another call to `parse-partial-sexp'.
+
+ The result is a list of eight elements describing the final state
+ of the parse:
+
+ 0. The depth in parentheses, counting from 0.
+
+ 1. The character position of the start of the innermost
+ parenthetical grouping containing the stopping point; `nil'
+ if none.
+
+ 2. The character position of the start of the last complete
+ subexpression terminated; `nil' if none.
+
+ 3. Non-`nil' if inside a string. More precisely, this is the
+ character that will terminate the string.
+
+ 4. `t' if inside a comment (of either style).
+
+ 5. `t' if point is just after a quote character.
+
+ 6. The minimum parenthesis depth encountered during this scan.
+
+ 7. `t' if inside a comment of style "b".
+
+ Elements 0, 3, 4, 5 and 7 are significant in the argument STATE.
+
+ This function is most often used to compute indentation for
+ languages that have nested parentheses.
+
+ - Function: scan-lists from count depth &optional buffer noerror
+ This function scans forward COUNT balanced parenthetical groupings
+ from character number FROM. It returns the character position
+ where the scan stops.
+
+ If DEPTH is nonzero, parenthesis depth counting begins from that
+ value. The only candidates for stopping are places where the
+ depth in parentheses becomes zero; `scan-lists' counts COUNT such
+ places and then stops. Thus, a positive value for DEPTH means go
+ out DEPTH levels of parenthesis.
+
+ Scanning ignores comments if `parse-sexp-ignore-comments' is
+ non-`nil'.
+
+ If the scan reaches the beginning or end of the buffer (or its
+ accessible portion), and the depth is not zero, an error is
+ signaled. If the depth is zero but the count is not used up,
`nil' is returned.
- The following convenience functions are provided for setting
-particular properties of an extent.
+ If optional arg BUFFER is non-`nil', scanning occurs in that
+ buffer instead of in the current buffer.
+
+ If optional arg NOERROR is non-`nil', `scan-lists' will return
+ `nil' instead of signalling an error.
+
+ - Function: scan-sexps from count &optional buffer noerror
+ This function scans forward COUNT sexps from character position
+ FROM. It returns the character position where the scan stops.
- - Function: set-extent-priority extent pri
- This function sets the `priority' property of EXTENT to PRI.
+ Scanning ignores comments if `parse-sexp-ignore-comments' is
+ non-`nil'.
- - Function: set-extent-face extent face
- This function sets the `face' property of EXTENT to FACE.
+ If the scan reaches the beginning or end of (the accessible part
+ of) the buffer in the middle of a parenthetical grouping, an error
+ is signaled. If it reaches the beginning or end between groupings
+ but before count is used up, `nil' is returned.
- - Function: set-extent-mouse-face extent face
- This function sets the `mouse-face' property of EXTENT to FACE.
+ If optional arg BUFFER is non-`nil', scanning occurs in that
+ buffer instead of in the current buffer.
- - Function: set-extent-keymap extent keymap
- This function sets the `keymap' property of EXTENT to KEYMAP.
- KEYMAP must be either a keymap object, or `nil'.
+ If optional arg NOERROR is non-`nil', `scan-sexps' will return nil
+ instead of signalling an error.
- - Function: set-extent-begin-glyph-layout extent layout
- This function sets the `begin-glyph-layout' property of EXTENT to
- LAYOUT.
+ - Variable: parse-sexp-ignore-comments
+ If the value is non-`nil', then comments are treated as whitespace
+ by the functions in this section and by `forward-sexp'.
- - Function: set-extent-end-glyph-layout extent layout
- This function sets the `end-glyph-layout' property of EXTENT to
- LAYOUT.
+ In older Emacs versions, this feature worked only when the comment
+ terminator is something like `*/', and appears only to end a
+ comment. In languages where newlines terminate comments, it was
+ necessary make this variable `nil', since not every newline is the
+ end of a comment. This limitation no longer exists.
- - Function: set-extent-begin-glyph extent begin-glyph &optional layout
- This function sets the `begin-glyph' and `glyph-layout' properties
- of EXTENT to BEGIN-GLYPH and LAYOUT, respectively. (LAYOUT
- defaults to `text' if not specified.)
+ You can use `forward-comment' to move forward or backward over one
+comment or several comments.
- - Function: set-extent-end-glyph extent end-glyph &optional layout
- This function sets the `end-glyph' and `glyph-layout' properties
- of EXTENT to END-GLYPH and LAYOUT, respectively. (LAYOUT defaults
- to `text' if not specified.)
+ - Function: forward-comment count &optional buffer
+ This function moves point forward across COUNT comments (backward,
+ if COUNT is negative). If it finds anything other than a comment
+ or whitespace, it stops, leaving point at the place where it
+ stopped. It also stops after satisfying COUNT.
- - Function: set-extent-initial-redisplay-function extent function
- This function sets the `initial-redisplay-function' property of the
- extent to FUNCTION.
+ Optional argument BUFFER defaults to the current buffer.
+
+ To move forward over all comments and whitespace following point, use
+`(forward-comment (buffer-size))'. `(buffer-size)' is a good argument
+to use, because the number of comments in the buffer cannot exceed that
+many.
\1f
-File: lispref.info, Node: Detached Extents, Next: Extent Parents, Prev: Extent Properties, Up: Extents
+File: lispref.info, Node: Standard Syntax Tables, Next: Syntax Table Internals, Prev: Parsing Expressions, Up: Syntax Tables
-Detached Extents
-================
+Some Standard Syntax Tables
+===========================
+
+ Most of the major modes in XEmacs have their own syntax tables. Here
+are several of them:
+
+ - Function: standard-syntax-table
+ This function returns the standard syntax table, which is the
+ syntax table used in Fundamental mode.
- A detached extent is an extent that is not attached to a buffer or
-string but can be re-inserted. Detached extents have a start position
-and end position of `nil'. Extents can be explicitly detached using
-`detach-extent'. An extent is also detached when all of its characters
-are all killed by a deletion, if its `detachable' property is set; if
-this property is not set, the extent becomes a zero-length extent.
-(Zero-length extents with the `detachable' property set behave
-specially. *Note zero-length extents: Extent Endpoints.)
-
- - Function: detach-extent extent
- This function detaches EXTENT from its buffer or string. If
- EXTENT has the `duplicable' property, its detachment is tracked by
- the undo mechanism. *Note Duplicable Extents::.
-
- - Function: extent-detached-p extent
- This function returns `nil' if EXTENT is detached, and `t'
- otherwise.
-
- - Function: copy-extent extent &optional object
- This function makes a copy of EXTENT. It is initially detached.
- Optional argument OBJECT defaults to EXTENT's object (normally a
- buffer or string, but could be `nil').
-
- - Function: insert-extent extent &optional start end no-hooks object
- This function inserts EXTENT from START to END in OBJECT (a buffer
- or string). If EXTENT is detached from a different buffer or
- string, or in most cases when EXTENT is already attached, the
- extent will first be copied as if with `copy-extent'. This
- function operates the same as if `insert' were called on a string
- whose extent data calls for EXTENT to be inserted, except that if
- NO-HOOKS is non-`nil', EXTENT's `paste-function' will not be
- invoked. *Note Duplicable Extents::.
+ - Variable: text-mode-syntax-table
+ The value of this variable is the syntax table used in Text mode.
+
+ - Variable: c-mode-syntax-table
+ The value of this variable is the syntax table for C-mode buffers.
+
+ - Variable: emacs-lisp-mode-syntax-table
+ The value of this variable is the syntax table used in Emacs Lisp
+ mode by editing commands. (It has no effect on the Lisp `read'
+ function.)
\1f
-File: lispref.info, Node: Extent Parents, Next: Duplicable Extents, Prev: Detached Extents, Up: Extents
+File: lispref.info, Node: Syntax Table Internals, Prev: Standard Syntax Tables, Up: Syntax Tables
-Extent Parents
-==============
+Syntax Table Internals
+======================
- An extent can have a parent extent set for it. If this is the case,
-the extent derives all its properties from that extent and has no
-properties of its own. The only "properties" that the extent keeps are
-the buffer or string it refers to and the start and end points. (More
-correctly, the extent's own properties are shadowed. If you later
-change the extent to have no parent, its own properties will become
-visible again.)
+ Each element of a syntax table is an integer that encodes the syntax
+of one character: the syntax class, possible matching character, and
+flags. Lisp programs don't usually work with the elements directly; the
+Lisp-level syntax table functions usually work with syntax descriptors
+(*note Syntax Descriptors::).
- It is possible for an extent's parent to itself have a parent, and
-so on. Through this, a whole tree of extents can be created, all
-deriving their properties from one root extent. Note, however, that
-you cannot create an inheritance loop--this is explicitly disallowed.
+ The low 8 bits of each element of a syntax table indicate the syntax
+class.
- Parent extents are used to implement the extents over the modeline.
+Integer
+ Class
- - Function: set-extent-parent extent parent
- This function sets the parent of EXTENT to PARENT. If PARENT is
- `nil', the extent is set to have no parent.
+0
+ whitespace
- - Function: extent-parent extent
- This function return the parents (if any) of EXTENT, or `nil'.
+1
+ punctuation
- - Function: extent-children extent
- This function returns a list of the children (if any) of EXTENT.
- The children of an extent are all those extents whose parent is
- that extent. This function does not recursively trace children of
- children.
+2
+ word
- - Function: extent-descendants extent
- This function returns a list of all descendants of EXTENT,
- including EXTENT. This recursively applies `extent-children' to
- any children of EXTENT, until no more children can be found.
+3
+ symbol
-\1f
-File: lispref.info, Node: Duplicable Extents, Next: Extents and Events, Prev: Extent Parents, Up: Extents
+4
+ open parenthesis
-Duplicable Extents
-==================
+5
+ close parenthesis
+
+6
+ expression prefix
+
+7
+ string quote
+
+8
+ paired delimiter
+
+9
+ escape
+
+10
+ character quote
+
+11
+ comment-start
+
+12
+ comment-end
- If an extent has the `duplicable' property, it will be copied into
-strings, so that kill, yank, and undo commands will restore or copy it.
-
- Specifically:
-
- * When a string is created using `buffer-substring' or
- `buffer-string', any duplicable extents in the region corresponding
- to the string will be copied into the string (*note Buffer
- Contents::). When the string in inserted into a buffer using
- `insert', `insert-before-markers', `insert-buffer' or
- `insert-buffer-substring', the extents in the string will be copied
- back into the buffer (*note Insertion::). The extents in a string
- can, of course, be retrieved explicitly using the standard extent
- primitives over the string.
-
- * Similarly, when text is copied or cut into the kill ring, any
- duplicable extents will be remembered and reinserted later when
- the text is pasted back into a buffer.
-
- * When `concat' is called on strings, the extents in the strings are
- copied into the resulting string.
-
- * When `substring' is called on a string, the relevant extents are
- copied into the resulting string.
-
- * When a duplicable extent is detached by `detach-extent' or string
- deletion, or inserted by `insert-extent' or string insertion, the
- action is recorded by the undo mechanism so that it can be undone
- later. Note that if an extent gets detached and then a later undo
- causes the extent to get reinserted, the new extent will not be
- `eq' to the original extent.
-
- * Extent motion, face changes, and attachment via `make-extent' are
- not recorded by the undo mechanism. This means that extent changes
- which are to be undo-able must be performed by character editing,
- or by insertion and detachment of duplicable extents.
-
- * A duplicable extent's `copy-function' property, if non-`nil',
- should be a function, and will be run when a duplicable extent is
- about to be copied from a buffer to a string (or the kill ring).
- It is called with three arguments: the extent and the buffer
- positions within it which are being copied. If this function
- returns `nil', then the extent will not be copied; otherwise it
- will.
-
- * A duplicable extent's `paste-function' property, if non-`nil',
- should be a function, and will be run when a duplicable extent is
- about to be copied from a string (or the kill ring) into a buffer.
- It is called with three arguments: the original extent and the
- buffer positions which the copied extent will occupy. (This hook
- is run after the corresponding text has already been inserted into
- the buffer.) Note that the extent argument may be detached when
- this function is run. If this function returns `nil', no extent
- will be inserted. Otherwise, there will be an extent covering the
- range in question.
-
- Note: if the extent to be copied is already attached to the buffer
- and overlaps the new range, the extent will simply be extended and
- the `paste-function' will not be called.
+13
+ inherit
+
+ The next 8 bits are the matching opposite parenthesis (if the
+character has parenthesis syntax); otherwise, they are not meaningful.
+The next 6 bits are the flags.
\1f
-File: lispref.info, Node: Extents and Events, Next: Atomic Extents, Prev: Duplicable Extents, Up: Extents
-
-Interaction of Extents with Keyboard and Mouse Events
-=====================================================
-
- If an extent has the `mouse-face' property set, it will be
-highlighted when the mouse passes over it. Highlighting is accomplished
-by merging the extent's face with the face or faces specified by the
-`mouse-face' property. The effect is as if a pseudo-extent with the
-`mouse-face' face were inserted after the extent in the display order
-(*note Extent Endpoints::, display order).
-
- - Variable: mouse-highlight-priority
- This variable holds the priority to use when merging in the
- highlighting pseudo-extent. The default is 1000. This is
- purposely set very high so that the highlighting pseudo-extent
- shows up even if there are other extents with various priorities
- at the same location.
-
- You can also explicitly cause an extent to be highlighted. Only one
-extent at a time can be highlighted in this fashion, and any other
-highlighted extent will be de-highlighted.
-
- - Function: highlight-extent extent &optional highlight-p
- This function highlights (if HIGHLIGHT-P is non-`nil') or
- de-highlights (if HIGHLIGHT-P is `nil') EXTENT, if EXTENT has the
- `mouse-face' property. (Nothing happens if EXTENT does not have
- the `mouse-face' property.)
-
- - Function: force-highlight-extent extent &optional highlight-p
- This function is similar to `highlight-extent' but highlights or
- de-highlights the extent regardless of whether it has the
- `mouse-face' property.
-
- If an extent has a `keymap' property, this keymap will be consulted
-for mouse clicks on the extent and keypresses made while `point' is
-within the extent. The behavior of mouse clicks and keystrokes not
-defined in the keymap is as normal for the buffer.
+File: lispref.info, Node: Abbrevs, Next: Extents, Prev: Syntax Tables, Up: Top
+
+Abbrevs And Abbrev Expansion
+****************************
+
+ An abbreviation or "abbrev" is a string of characters that may be
+expanded to a longer string. The user can insert the abbrev string and
+find it replaced automatically with the expansion of the abbrev. This
+saves typing.
+
+ The set of abbrevs currently in effect is recorded in an "abbrev
+table". Each buffer has a local abbrev table, but normally all buffers
+in the same major mode share one abbrev table. There is also a global
+abbrev table. Normally both are used.
+
+ An abbrev table is represented as an obarray containing a symbol for
+each abbreviation. The symbol's name is the abbreviation; its value is
+the expansion; its function definition is the hook function to do the
+expansion (*note Defining Abbrevs::); its property list cell contains
+the use count, the number of times the abbreviation has been expanded.
+Because these symbols are not interned in the usual obarray, they will
+never appear as the result of reading a Lisp expression; in fact,
+normally they are never used except by the code that handles abbrevs.
+Therefore, it is safe to use them in an extremely nonstandard way.
+*Note Creating Symbols::.
+
+ For the user-level commands for abbrevs, see *Note Abbrev Mode:
+(emacs)Abbrevs.
+
+* Menu:
+
+* Abbrev Mode:: Setting up XEmacs for abbreviation.
+* Tables: Abbrev Tables. Creating and working with abbrev tables.
+* Defining Abbrevs:: Specifying abbreviations and their expansions.
+* Files: Abbrev Files. Saving abbrevs in files.
+* Expansion: Abbrev Expansion. Controlling expansion; expansion subroutines.
+* Standard Abbrev Tables:: Abbrev tables used by various major modes.
\1f
-File: lispref.info, Node: Atomic Extents, Prev: Extents and Events, Up: Extents
+File: lispref.info, Node: Abbrev Mode, Next: Abbrev Tables, Up: Abbrevs
-Atomic Extents
-==============
+Setting Up Abbrev Mode
+======================
- If the Lisp file `atomic-extents' is loaded, then the atomic extent
-facility is available. An "atomic extent" is an extent for which
-`point' cannot be positioned anywhere within it. This ensures that
-when selecting text, either all or none of the extent is selected.
+ Abbrev mode is a minor mode controlled by the value of the variable
+`abbrev-mode'.
- To make an extent atomic, set its `atomic' property.
+ - Variable: abbrev-mode
+ A non-`nil' value of this variable turns on the automatic expansion
+ of abbrevs when their abbreviations are inserted into a buffer.
+ If the value is `nil', abbrevs may be defined, but they are not
+ expanded automatically.
+
+ This variable automatically becomes local when set in any fashion.
+
+ - Variable: default-abbrev-mode
+ This is the value of `abbrev-mode' for buffers that do not
+ override it. This is the same as `(default-value 'abbrev-mode)'.
\1f
-File: lispref.info, Node: Specifiers, Next: Faces and Window-System Objects, Prev: Extents, Up: Top
+File: lispref.info, Node: Abbrev Tables, Next: Defining Abbrevs, Prev: Abbrev Mode, Up: Abbrevs
-Specifiers
-**********
+Abbrev Tables
+=============
- A specifier is an object used to keep track of a property whose value
-may vary depending on the particular situation (e.g. particular buffer
-displayed in a particular window) that it is used in. The value of many
-built-in properties, such as the font, foreground, background, and such
-properties of a face and variables such as `modeline-shadow-thickness'
-and `top-toolbar-height', is actually a specifier object. The
-specifier object, in turn, is "instanced" in a particular situation to
-yield the real value of the property in that situation.
+ This section describes how to create and manipulate abbrev tables.
- - Function: specifierp object
- This function returns non-`nil' if OBJECT is a specifier.
+ - Function: make-abbrev-table
+ This function creates and returns a new, empty abbrev table--an
+ obarray containing no symbols. It is a vector filled with zeros.
-* Menu:
+ - Function: clear-abbrev-table table
+ This function undefines all the abbrevs in abbrev table TABLE,
+ leaving it empty. The function returns `nil'.
-* Introduction to Specifiers:: Specifiers provide a clean way for
- display and other properties to vary
- (under user control) in a wide variety
- of contexts.
-* Specifiers In-Depth:: Gory details about specifier innards.
-* Specifier Instancing:: Instancing means obtaining the ``value'' of
- a specifier in a particular context.
-* Specifier Types:: Specifiers come in different flavors.
-* Adding Specifications:: Specifications control a specifier's ``value''
- by giving conditions under which a
- particular value is valid.
-* Retrieving Specifications:: Querying a specifier's specifications.
-* Specifier Tag Functions:: Working with specifier tags.
-* Specifier Instancing Functions::
- Functions to instance a specifier.
-* Specifier Example:: Making all this stuff clearer.
-* Creating Specifiers:: Creating specifiers for your own use.
-* Specifier Validation Functions::
- Validating the components of a specifier.
-* Other Specification Functions::
- Other ways of working with specifications.
+ - Function: define-abbrev-table table-name definitions
+ This function defines TABLE-NAME (a symbol) as an abbrev table
+ name, i.e., as a variable whose value is an abbrev table. It
+ defines abbrevs in the table according to DEFINITIONS, a list of
+ elements of the form `(ABBREVNAME EXPANSION HOOK USECOUNT)'. The
+ value is always `nil'.
-\1f
-File: lispref.info, Node: Introduction to Specifiers, Next: Specifiers In-Depth, Up: Specifiers
+ - Variable: abbrev-table-name-list
+ This is a list of symbols whose values are abbrev tables.
+ `define-abbrev-table' adds the new abbrev table name to this list.
+
+ - Function: insert-abbrev-table-description name &optional human
+ This function inserts before point a description of the abbrev
+ table named NAME. The argument NAME is a symbol whose value is an
+ abbrev table. The value is always `nil'.
-Introduction to Specifiers
-==========================
+ If HUMAN is non-`nil', the description is human-oriented.
+ Otherwise the description is a Lisp expression--a call to
+ `define-abbrev-table' that would define NAME exactly as it is
+ currently defined.
- Sometimes you may want the value of a property to vary depending on
-the context the property is used in. A simple example of this in XEmacs
-is buffer-local variables. For example, the variable
-`modeline-format', which controls the format of the modeline, can have
-different values depending on the particular buffer being edited. The
-variable has a default value which most modes will use, but a
-specialized package such as Calendar might change the variable so as to
-tailor the modeline to its own purposes.
+\1f
+File: lispref.info, Node: Defining Abbrevs, Next: Abbrev Files, Prev: Abbrev Tables, Up: Abbrevs
- Other properties (such as those that can be changed by the
-`modify-frame-parameters' function, for example the color of the text
-cursor) can have frame-local values, although it might also make sense
-for them to have buffer-local values. In other cases, you might want
-the property to vary depending on the particular window within the
-frame that applies (e.g. the top or bottom window in a split frame), the
-device type that that frame appears on (X or tty), etc. Perhaps you can
-envision some more complicated scenario where you want a particular
-value in a specified buffer, another value in all other buffers
-displayed on a particular frame, another value in all other buffers
-displayed in all other frames on any mono (two-color, e.g. black and
-white only) displays, and a default value in all other circumstances.
+Defining Abbrevs
+================
- A "specifier" is a generalization of this, allowing a great deal of
-flexibility in controlling exactly what value a property has in which
-circumstances. It is most commonly used for display properties, such as
-an image or the foreground color of a face. As a simple example, you
-can specify that the foreground of the default face be
+ These functions define an abbrev in a specified abbrev table.
+`define-abbrev' is the low-level basic function, while `add-abbrev' is
+used by commands that ask for information from the user.
- * blue for a particular buffer
+ - Function: add-abbrev table type arg
+ This function adds an abbreviation to abbrev table TABLE based on
+ information from the user. The argument TYPE is a string
+ describing in English the kind of abbrev this will be (typically,
+ `"global"' or `"mode-specific"'); this is used in prompting the
+ user. The argument ARG is the number of words in the expansion.
- * green for all other buffers
+ The return value is the symbol that internally represents the new
+ abbrev, or `nil' if the user declines to confirm redefining an
+ existing abbrev.
- As a more complicated example, you could specify that the foreground
-of the default face be
+ - Function: define-abbrev table name &optional expansion hook count
+ This function defines an abbrev in TABLE named NAME, to expand to
+ EXPANSION, and call HOOK. The return value is an uninterned
+ symbol that represents the abbrev inside XEmacs; its name is NAME.
- * forest green for all buffers displayed in a particular Emacs
- window, or green if the X server doesn't recognize the color
- `forest green'
+ The argument NAME should be a string. The argument EXPANSION
+ should be a string, or `nil' to undefine the abbrev.
- * blue for all buffers displayed in a particular frame
+ The argument HOOK is a function or `nil'. If HOOK is non-`nil',
+ then it is called with no arguments after the abbrev is replaced
+ with EXPANSION; point is located at the end of EXPANSION when HOOK
+ is called.
- * red for all other buffers displayed on a color device
+ The use count of the abbrev is initialized to zero.
- * white for all other buffers
+ - User Option: only-global-abbrevs
+ If this variable is non-`nil', it means that the user plans to use
+ global abbrevs only. This tells the commands that define
+ mode-specific abbrevs to define global ones instead. This
+ variable does not alter the behavior of the functions in this
+ section; it is examined by their callers.
\1f
-File: lispref.info, Node: Specifiers In-Depth, Next: Specifier Instancing, Prev: Introduction to Specifiers, Up: Specifiers
-
-In-Depth Overview of a Specifier
-================================
-
- A specifier object encapsulates a set of "specifications", each of
-which says what its value should be if a particular condition applies.
-For example, one specification might be "The value should be
-darkseagreen2 on X devices" another might be "The value should be blue
-in the *Help* buffer". In specifier terminology, these conditions are
-called "locales" and the values are called "instantiators". Given a
-specifier, a logical question is "What is its value in a particular
-situation?" This involves looking through the specifications to see
-which ones apply to this particular situation, and perhaps preferring
-one over another if more than one applies. In specifier terminology, a
-"particular situation" is called a "domain", and determining its value
-in a particular domain is called "instancing". Most of the time, a
-domain is identified by a particular window. For example, if the
-redisplay engine is drawing text in the default face in a particular
-window, it retrieves the specifier for the foreground color of the
-default face and "instances" it in the domain given by that window; in
-other words, it asks the specifier, "What is your value in this
-window?".
-
- More specifically, a specifier contains a set of "specifications",
-each of which associates a "locale" (a window object, a buffer object,
-a frame object, a device object, or the symbol `global') with an
-"inst-list", which is a list of one or more "inst-pairs". (For each
-possible locale, there can be at most one specification containing that
-locale.) Each inst-pair is a cons of a "tag set" (an unordered list of
-zero or more symbols, or "tags") and an "instantiator" (the allowed
-form of this varies depending on the type of specifier). In a given
-specification, there may be more than one inst-pair with the same tag
-set; this is unlike for locales.
-
- The tag set is used to restrict the sorts of devices over which the
-instantiator is valid and to uniquely identify instantiators added by a
-particular application, so that different applications can work on the
-same specifier and not interfere with each other. Each tag can have a
-"predicate" associated with it, which is a function of one argument (a
-device) that specifies whether the tag matches that particular device.
-(If a tag does not have a predicate, it matches all devices.) All tags
-in a tag set must match a device for the associated inst-pair to be
-instantiable over that device. (A null tag set is perfectly valid.)
-
- The valid device types (normally `x', `tty', and `stream') and
-device classes (normally `color', `grayscale', and `mono') can always
-be used as tags, and match devices of the associated type or class
-(*note Consoles and Devices::). User-defined tags may be defined, with
-an optional predicate specified. An application can create its own
-tag, use it to mark all its instantiators, and be fairly confident that
-it will not interfere with other applications that modify the same
-specifier--Functions that add a specification to a specifier usually
-only overwrite existing inst-pairs with the same tag set as was given,
-and a particular tag or tag set can be specified when removing
-instantiators.
-
- When a specifier is instanced in a domain, both the locale and the
-tag set can be viewed as specifying necessary conditions that must
-apply in that domain for an instantiator to be considered as a possible
-result of the instancing. More specific locales always override more
-general locales (thus, there is no particular ordering of the
-specifications in a specifier); however, the tag sets are simply
-considered in the order that the inst-pairs occur in the
-specification's inst-list.
-
- Note also that the actual object that results from the instancing
-(called an "instance object") may not be the same as the instantiator
-from which it was derived. For some specifier types (such as integer
-specifiers and boolean specifiers), the instantiator will be returned
-directly as the instance object. For other types, however, this is not
-the case. For example, for font specifiers, the instantiator is a
-font-description string and the instance object is a font-instance
-object, which describes how the font is displayed on a particular
-device. A font-instance object encapsulates such things as the actual
-font name used to display the font on that device (a font-description
-string under X is usually a wildcard specification that may resolve to
-different font names, with possibly different foundries, widths, etc.,
-on different devices), the extra properties of that font on that
-device, etc. Furthermore, this conversion (called "instantiation")
-might fail--a font or color might not exist on a particular device, for
-example.
+File: lispref.info, Node: Abbrev Files, Next: Abbrev Expansion, Prev: Defining Abbrevs, Up: Abbrevs
+
+Saving Abbrevs in Files
+=======================
+
+ A file of saved abbrev definitions is actually a file of Lisp code.
+The abbrevs are saved in the form of a Lisp program to define the same
+abbrev tables with the same contents. Therefore, you can load the file
+with `load' (*note How Programs Do Loading::). However, the function
+`quietly-read-abbrev-file' is provided as a more convenient interface.
+
+ User-level facilities such as `save-some-buffers' can save abbrevs
+in a file automatically, under the control of variables described here.
+
+ - User Option: abbrev-file-name
+ This is the default file name for reading and saving abbrevs.
+
+ - Function: quietly-read-abbrev-file &optional filename
+ This function reads abbrev definitions from a file named FILENAME,
+ previously written with `write-abbrev-file'. If FILENAME is
+ `nil', the file specified in `abbrev-file-name' is used.
+ `save-abbrevs' is set to `t' so that changes will be saved.
+
+ This function does not display any messages. It returns `nil'.
+
+ - User Option: save-abbrevs
+ A non-`nil' value for `save-abbrev' means that XEmacs should save
+ abbrevs when files are saved. `abbrev-file-name' specifies the
+ file to save the abbrevs in.
+
+ - Variable: abbrevs-changed
+ This variable is set non-`nil' by defining or altering any
+ abbrevs. This serves as a flag for various XEmacs commands to
+ offer to save your abbrevs.
+
+ - Command: write-abbrev-file filename
+ Save all abbrev definitions, in all abbrev tables, in the file
+ FILENAME, in the form of a Lisp program that when loaded will
+ define the same abbrevs. This function returns `nil'.