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1 @c This is part of the Emacs manual.
2 @c Copyright (C) 1985, 1986, 1987, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1997, 2000, 2001,
3 @c 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4 @c See file emacs.texi for copying conditions.
5 @node Customization, Quitting, Amusements, Top
6 @chapter Customization
7 @cindex customization
8
9 This chapter describes some simple methods to customize the behavior
10 of Emacs.
11
12 Apart from the methods described here, see @ref{X Resources} for
13 information about using X resources to customize Emacs, and see
14 @ref{Keyboard Macros} for information about recording and replaying
15 keyboard macros. Making more far-reaching and open-ended changes
16 involves writing Emacs Lisp code; see
17 @iftex
18 @cite{The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.
19 @end iftex
20 @ifnottex
21 @ref{Top, Emacs Lisp, Emacs Lisp, elisp, The Emacs Lisp
22 Reference Manual}.
23 @end ifnottex
24
25 @menu
26 * Minor Modes:: Each minor mode is a feature you can turn on
27 independently of any others.
28 * Easy Customization:: Convenient way to browse and change settings.
29 * Variables:: Many Emacs commands examine Emacs variables
30 to decide what to do; by setting variables,
31 you can control their functioning.
32 * Key Bindings:: The keymaps say what command each key runs.
33 By changing them, you can "redefine keys".
34 * Syntax:: The syntax table controls how words and
35 expressions are parsed.
36 * Init File:: How to write common customizations in the
37 @file{.emacs} file.
38 @end menu
39
40 @node Minor Modes
41 @section Minor Modes
42 @cindex minor modes
43 @cindex mode, minor
44
45 Minor modes are optional features which you can turn on or off. For
46 example, Auto Fill mode is a minor mode in which @key{SPC} breaks
47 lines between words as you type. Minor modes are independent of one
48 another and of the selected major mode. Most minor modes say in the
49 mode line when they are enabled; for example, @samp{Fill} in the mode
50 line means that Auto Fill mode is enabled.
51
52 Each minor mode is associated with a command, called the @dfn{mode
53 command}, which turns it on or off. The name of this command consists
54 of the name of the minor mode, followed by @samp{-mode}; for instance,
55 the mode command for Auto Fill mode is @code{auto-fill-mode}. Calling
56 the minor mode command with no prefix argument @dfn{toggles} the mode,
57 turning it on if it was off, and off if it was on. A positive
58 argument always turns the mode on, and a zero or negative argument
59 always turns it off. Mode commands are usually invoked with
60 @kbd{M-x}, but you can bind keys to them if you wish (@pxref{Key
61 Bindings}).
62
63 Most minor modes also have a @dfn{mode variable}, with the same name
64 as the mode command. Its value is non-@code{nil} if the mode is
65 enabled, and @code{nil} if it is disabled. In some minor modes---but
66 not all---the value of the variable alone determines whether the mode
67 is active: the mode command works simply by setting the variable, and
68 changing the value of the variable has the same effect as calling the
69 mode command. Because not all minor modes work this way, we recommend
70 that you avoid changing the mode variables directly; use the mode
71 commands instead.
72
73 Some minor modes are @dfn{buffer-local}: they apply only to the
74 current buffer, so you can enable the mode in certain buffers and not
75 others. Other minor modes are @dfn{global}: while enabled, they
76 affect everything you do in the Emacs session, in all buffers. Some
77 global minor modes are enabled by default.
78
79 The following is a list of some buffer-local minor modes:
80
81 @itemize @bullet
82 @item
83 Abbrev mode automatically expands text based on pre-defined
84 abbreviation definitions. @xref{Abbrevs}.
85
86 @item
87 Auto Fill mode inserts newlines as you type to prevent lines from
88 becoming too long. @xref{Filling}.
89
90 @item
91 Auto Save mode saves the buffer contents periodically to reduce the
92 amount of work you can lose in case of a crash. @xref{Auto Save}.
93
94 @item
95 Enriched mode enables editing and saving of formatted text.
96 @xref{Formatted Text}.
97
98 @item
99 Flyspell mode automatically highlights misspelled words.
100 @xref{Spelling}.
101
102 @item
103 Font-Lock mode automatically highlights certain textual units found in
104 programs. It is enabled globally by default, but you can disable it
105 in individual buffers. @xref{Faces}.
106
107 @findex linum-mode
108 @cindex Linum mode
109 @item
110 Linum mode displays each line's line number in the window's left
111 margin. Its mode command is @code{linum-mode}.
112
113 @item
114 Outline minor mode provides similar facilities to the major mode
115 called Outline mode. @xref{Outline Mode}.
116
117 @cindex Overwrite mode
118 @cindex mode, Overwrite
119 @findex overwrite-mode
120 @kindex INSERT
121 @item
122 Overwrite mode causes ordinary printing characters to replace existing
123 text instead of shoving it to the right. For example, if point is in
124 front of the @samp{B} in @samp{FOOBAR}, then in Overwrite mode typing
125 a @kbd{G} changes it to @samp{FOOGAR}, instead of producing
126 @samp{FOOGBAR} as usual. In Overwrite mode, the command @kbd{C-q}
127 inserts the next character whatever it may be, even if it is a
128 digit---this gives you a way to insert a character instead of
129 replacing an existing character. The mode command,
130 @code{overwrite-mode}, is bound to the @key{Insert} key.
131
132 @findex binary-overwrite-mode
133 @item
134 Binary Overwrite mode is a variant of Overwrite mode for editing
135 binary files; it treats newlines and tabs like other characters, so
136 that they overwrite other characters and can be overwritten by them.
137 In Binary Overwrite mode, digits after @kbd{C-q} specify an octal
138 character code, as usual.
139
140 @item
141 Visual Line mode performs ``word wrapping'', causing long lines to be
142 wrapped at word boundaries. @xref{Visual Line Mode}.
143 @end itemize
144
145 Here are some useful global minor modes. Since Line Number mode and
146 Transient Mark mode can be enabled or disabled just by setting the
147 value of the minor mode variable, you @emph{can} set them differently
148 for particular buffers, by explicitly making the corresponding
149 variable local in those buffers. @xref{Locals}.
150
151 @itemize @bullet
152 @item
153 Column Number mode enables display of the current column number in the
154 mode line. @xref{Mode Line}.
155
156 @item
157 Delete Selection mode causes text insertion to first delete the text
158 in the region, if the region is active. @xref{Using Region}.
159
160 @item
161 Icomplete mode displays an indication of available completions when
162 you are in the minibuffer and completion is active. @xref{Completion
163 Options}.
164
165 @item
166 Line Number mode enables display of the current line number in the
167 mode line. It is enabled by default. @xref{Mode Line}.
168
169 @item
170 Menu Bar mode gives each frame a menu bar. It is enabled by default.
171 @xref{Menu Bars}.
172
173 @item
174 Scroll Bar mode gives each window a scroll bar. It is enabled by
175 default, but the scroll bar is only displayed on graphical terminals.
176 @xref{Scroll Bars}.
177
178 @item
179 Tool Bar mode gives each frame a tool bar. It is enabled by default,
180 but the tool bar is only displayed on graphical terminals. @xref{Tool
181 Bars}.
182
183 @item
184 Transient Mark mode highlights the region, and makes many Emacs
185 commands operate on the region when the mark is active. It is enabled
186 by default. @xref{Mark}.
187 @end itemize
188
189 @node Easy Customization
190 @section Easy Customization Interface
191
192 @cindex settings
193 Emacs has many @dfn{settings} which have values that you can change.
194 Many are documented in this manual. Most settings are @dfn{user
195 options}---that is to say, Lisp variables (@pxref{Variables})---and
196 their names appear in the Variable Index (@pxref{Variable Index}).
197 The other settings are faces and their attributes (@pxref{Faces}).
198
199 @findex customize
200 @cindex customization buffer
201 You can browse settings and change them using @kbd{M-x customize}.
202 This creates a @dfn{customization buffer}, which lets you navigate
203 through a logically organized list of settings, edit and set their
204 values, and save them permanently in your initialization file
205 (@pxref{Init File}).
206
207 @menu
208 * Customization Groups:: How settings are classified in a structure.
209 * Browsing Custom:: Browsing and searching for settings.
210 * Changing a Variable:: How to edit an option's value and set the option.
211 * Saving Customizations:: Specifying the file for saving customizations.
212 * Face Customization:: How to edit the attributes of a face.
213 * Specific Customization:: Making a customization buffer for specific
214 variables, faces, or groups.
215 * Custom Themes:: How to define collections of customized options
216 that can be loaded and unloaded together.
217 @end menu
218
219 @node Customization Groups
220 @subsection Customization Groups
221 @cindex customization groups
222
223 For customization purposes, settings are organized into @dfn{groups}
224 to help you find them. Groups are collected into bigger groups, all
225 the way up to a master group called @code{Emacs}.
226
227 @kbd{M-x customize} creates a customization buffer that shows the
228 top-level @code{Emacs} group and the second-level groups immediately
229 under it. It looks like this, in part:
230
231 @c we want the buffer example to all be on one page, but unfortunately
232 @c that's quite a bit of text, so force all space to the bottom.
233 @page
234 @smallexample
235 @group
236 /- Emacs group: Customization of the One True Editor. -------------\
237 [State]: visible group members are all at standard values.
238
239 See also [Manual].
240
241 [Editing] : Basic text editing facilities.
242
243 [External] : Interfacing to external utilities.
244
245 @var{more second-level groups}
246
247 \- Emacs group end ------------------------------------------------/
248 @end group
249 @end smallexample
250
251 @noindent
252 This says that the buffer displays the contents of the @code{Emacs}
253 group. The other groups are listed because they are its contents. But
254 they are listed differently, without indentation and dashes, because
255 @emph{their} contents are not included. Each group has a single-line
256 documentation string; the @code{Emacs} group also has a @samp{[State]}
257 line.
258
259 @cindex editable fields (customization buffer)
260 @cindex buttons (customization buffer)
261 @cindex links (customization buffer)
262 Most of the text in the customization buffer is read-only, but it
263 typically includes some @dfn{editable fields} that you can edit.
264 There are also @dfn{buttons} and @dfn{links}, which do something when
265 you @dfn{invoke} them. To invoke a button or a link, either click on
266 it with @kbd{Mouse-1}, or move point to it and type @key{RET}.
267
268 For example, the phrase @samp{[State]} that appears in a
269 second-level group is a button. It operates on the same customization
270 buffer. Each group name, such as @samp{[Editing]}, is a hypertext
271 link to that group; invoking it creates a new customization buffer,
272 showing the group and its contents.
273
274 The @code{Emacs} group only contains other groups. These groups, in
275 turn, can contain settings or still more groups. By browsing the
276 hierarchy of groups, you will eventually find the feature you are
277 interested in customizing. Then you can use the customization buffer
278 to set that feature's settings. You can also go straight to a
279 particular group by name, using the command @kbd{M-x customize-group}.
280
281 @node Browsing Custom
282 @subsection Browsing and Searching for Options and Faces
283 @findex customize-browse
284
285 @kbd{M-x customize-browse} is another way to browse the available
286 settings. This command creates a special customization buffer which
287 shows only the names of groups and settings, and puts them in a
288 structure.
289
290 In this buffer, you can show the contents of a group by invoking the
291 @samp{[+]} button. When the group contents are visible, this button
292 changes to @samp{[-]}; invoking that hides the group contents again.
293
294 Each group or setting in this buffer has a link which says
295 @samp{[Group]}, @samp{[Option]} or @samp{[Face]}. Invoking this link
296 creates an ordinary customization buffer showing just that group and
297 its contents, just that user option, or just that face. This is the
298 way to change settings that you find with @kbd{M-x customize-browse}.
299
300 If you can guess part of the name of the settings you are interested
301 in, @kbd{M-x customize-apropos} is another way to search for settings.
302 However, unlike @code{customize} and @code{customize-browse},
303 @code{customize-apropos} can only find groups and settings that are
304 loaded in the current Emacs session. @xref{Specific Customization,,
305 Customizing Specific Items}.
306
307 @node Changing a Variable
308 @subsection Changing a Variable
309
310 Here is an example of what a variable (a user option) looks like in
311 the customization buffer:
312
313 @smallexample
314 Kill Ring Max: [Hide Value] 60
315 [State]: STANDARD.
316 Maximum length of kill ring before oldest elements are thrown away.
317 @end smallexample
318
319 The text following @samp{[Hide Value]}, @samp{60} in this case, indicates
320 the current value of the variable. If you see @samp{[Show Value]} instead of
321 @samp{[Hide Value]}, it means that the value is hidden; the customization
322 buffer initially hides values that take up several lines. Invoke
323 @samp{[Show Value]} to show the value.
324
325 The line after the variable name indicates the @dfn{customization
326 state} of the variable: in the example above, it says you have not
327 changed the option yet. The @samp{[State]} button at the beginning of
328 this line gives you a menu of various operations for customizing the
329 variable.
330
331 The line after the @samp{[State]} line displays the beginning of the
332 variable's documentation string. If there are more lines of
333 documentation, this line ends with a @samp{[More]} button; invoke that
334 to show the full documentation string.
335
336 To enter a new value for @samp{Kill Ring Max}, move point to the
337 value and edit it textually. For example, you can type @kbd{M-d},
338 then insert another number. As you begin to alter the text, you will
339 see the @samp{[State]} line change to say that you have edited the
340 value:
341
342 @smallexample
343 [State]: EDITED, shown value does not take effect until you set or @r{@dots{}}
344 save it.
345 @end smallexample
346
347 @cindex user options, how to set
348 @cindex variables, how to set
349 @cindex settings, how to set
350 Editing the value does not actually set the variable. To do that,
351 you must @dfn{set} the variable. To do this, invoke the
352 @samp{[State]} button and choose @samp{Set for Current Session}.
353
354 The state of the variable changes visibly when you set it:
355
356 @smallexample
357 [State]: SET for current session only.
358 @end smallexample
359
360 You don't have to worry about specifying a value that is not valid;
361 the @samp{Set for Current Session} operation checks for validity and
362 will not install an unacceptable value.
363
364 @kindex M-TAB @r{(customization buffer)}
365 @findex widget-complete
366 While editing a field that is a file name, directory name,
367 command name, or anything else for which completion is defined, you
368 can type @kbd{M-@key{TAB}} (@code{widget-complete}) to do completion.
369 (@kbd{@key{ESC} @key{TAB}} and @kbd{C-M-i} do the same thing.)
370
371 Some variables have a small fixed set of possible legitimate values.
372 These variables don't let you edit the value textually. Instead, a
373 @samp{[Value Menu]} button appears before the value; invoke this
374 button to change the value. For a boolean ``on or off'' value, the
375 button says @samp{[Toggle]}, and it changes to the other value.
376 @samp{[Value Menu]} and @samp{[Toggle]} simply edit the buffer; the
377 changes take real effect when you use the @samp{Set for Current
378 Session} operation.
379
380 Some variables have values with complex structure. For example, the
381 value of @code{file-coding-system-alist} is an association list. Here
382 is how it appears in the customization buffer:
383
384 @smallexample
385 File Coding System Alist: [Hide Value]
386 [INS] [DEL] File regexp: \.elc\'
387 Choice: [Value Menu] Encoding/decoding pair:
388 Decoding: emacs-mule
389 Encoding: emacs-mule
390 [INS] [DEL] File regexp: \(\`\|/\)loaddefs.el\'
391 Choice: [Value Menu] Encoding/decoding pair:
392 Decoding: raw-text
393 Encoding: raw-text-unix
394 [INS] [DEL] File regexp: \.tar\'
395 Choice: [Value Menu] Encoding/decoding pair:
396 Decoding: no-conversion
397 Encoding: no-conversion
398 [INS] [DEL] File regexp:
399 Choice: [Value Menu] Encoding/decoding pair:
400 Decoding: undecided
401 Encoding: nil
402 [INS]
403 [State]: STANDARD.
404 Alist to decide a coding system to use for a file I/O @r{@dots{}}
405 operation. [Hide Rest]
406 The format is ((PATTERN . VAL) ...),
407 where PATTERN is a regular expression matching a file name,
408 @r{[@dots{}more lines of documentation@dots{}]}
409 @end smallexample
410
411 @noindent
412 Each association in the list appears on four lines, with several
413 editable fields and/or buttons. You can edit the regexps and coding
414 systems using ordinary editing commands. You can also invoke
415 @samp{[Value Menu]} to switch to a different kind of value---for
416 instance, to specify a function instead of a pair of coding systems.
417
418 To delete an association from the list, invoke the @samp{[DEL]} button
419 for that item. To add an association, invoke @samp{[INS]} at the
420 position where you want to add it. There is an @samp{[INS]} button
421 between each pair of associations, another at the beginning and another
422 at the end, so you can add a new association at any position in the
423 list.
424
425 @kindex TAB @r{(customization buffer)}
426 @kindex S-TAB @r{(customization buffer)}
427 @findex widget-forward
428 @findex widget-backward
429 Two special commands, @key{TAB} and @kbd{S-@key{TAB}}, are useful
430 for moving through the customization buffer. @key{TAB}
431 (@code{widget-forward}) moves forward to the next button or editable
432 field; @kbd{S-@key{TAB}} (@code{widget-backward}) moves backward to
433 the previous button or editable field.
434
435 Typing @key{RET} on an editable field also moves forward, just like
436 @key{TAB}. You can thus type @key{RET} when you are finished editing
437 a field, to move on to the next button or field. To insert a newline
438 within an editable field, use @kbd{C-o} or @kbd{C-q C-j}.
439
440 @cindex saving a setting
441 @cindex settings, how to save
442 Setting the variable changes its value in the current Emacs session;
443 @dfn{saving} the value changes it for future sessions as well. To
444 save the variable, invoke @samp{[State]} and select the @samp{Save for
445 Future Sessions} operation. This works by writing code so as to set
446 the variable again, each time you start Emacs (@pxref{Saving
447 Customizations}).
448
449 You can also restore the variable to its standard value by invoking
450 @samp{[State]} and selecting the @samp{Erase Customization} operation.
451 There are actually four reset operations:
452
453 @table @samp
454 @item Undo Edits
455 If you have made some modifications and not yet set the variable,
456 this restores the text in the customization buffer to match
457 the actual value.
458
459 @item Reset to Saved
460 This restores the value of the variable to the last saved value,
461 and updates the text accordingly.
462
463 @item Erase Customization
464 This sets the variable to its standard value, and updates the text
465 accordingly. This also eliminates any saved value for the variable,
466 so that you will get the standard value in future Emacs sessions.
467
468 @item Set to Backup Value
469 This sets the variable to a previous value that was set in the
470 customization buffer in this session. If you customize a variable
471 and then reset it, which discards the customized value,
472 you can get the discarded value back again with this operation.
473 @end table
474
475 @cindex comments on customized settings
476 Sometimes it is useful to record a comment about a specific
477 customization. Use the @samp{Add Comment} item from the
478 @samp{[State]} menu to create a field for entering the comment. The
479 comment you enter will be saved, and displayed again if you again view
480 the same variable in a customization buffer, even in another session.
481
482 The state of a group indicates whether anything in that group has been
483 edited, set or saved.
484
485 Near the top of the customization buffer there are two lines of buttons:
486
487 @smallexample
488 [Set for Current Session] [Save for Future Sessions]
489 [Undo Edits] [Reset to Saved] [Erase Customization] [Finish]
490 @end smallexample
491
492 @vindex custom-buffer-done-function
493 @noindent
494 Invoking @samp{[Finish]} either buries or kills this customization
495 buffer according to the setting of the option
496 @code{custom-buffer-done-kill}; the default is to bury the buffer.
497 Each of the other buttons performs an operation---set, save or
498 reset---on each of the settings in the buffer that could meaningfully
499 be set, saved or reset. They do not operate on settings whose values
500 are hidden, nor on subgroups which are hidden or not visible in the buffer.
501
502 @node Saving Customizations
503 @subsection Saving Customizations
504
505 @vindex custom-file
506 Saving customizations from the customization buffer works by writing
507 code to a file. By reading this code, future sessions can set up the
508 customizations again. Normally, the code is saved in your
509 initialization file (@pxref{Init File}).
510
511 You can choose to save your customizations in a file other than your
512 initialization file. To make this work, you must add a couple of
513 lines of code to your initialization file, to set the variable
514 @code{custom-file} to the name of the desired file, and to load that
515 file. For example:
516
517 @example
518 (setq custom-file "~/.emacs-custom.el")
519 (load custom-file)
520 @end example
521
522 You can use @code{custom-file} to specify different customization
523 files for different Emacs versions, like this:
524
525 @example
526 (cond ((< emacs-major-version 22)
527 ;; @r{Emacs 21 customization.}
528 (setq custom-file "~/.custom-21.el"))
529 ((and (= emacs-major-version 22) (< emacs-minor-version 3))
530 ;; @r{Emacs 22 customization, before version 22.3.}
531 (setq custom-file "~/.custom-22.el"))
532 (t
533 ;; @r{Emacs version 22.3 or later.}
534 (setq custom-file "~/.emacs-custom.el")))
535
536 (load custom-file)
537 @end example
538
539 If Emacs was invoked with the @option{-q} or @option{--no-init-file}
540 options (@pxref{Initial Options}), it will not let you save your
541 customizations in your initialization file. This is because saving
542 customizations from such a session would wipe out all the other
543 customizations you might have on your initialization file.
544
545 @node Face Customization
546 @subsection Customizing Faces
547 @cindex customizing faces
548 @cindex bold font
549 @cindex italic font
550 @cindex fonts and faces
551
552 In addition to variables, some customization groups also include
553 faces. When you show the contents of a group, both the variables and
554 the faces in the group appear in the customization buffer. Here is an
555 example of how a face looks:
556
557 @smallexample
558 Custom Changed Face:(sample) [Hide Face]
559 [State]: STANDARD.
560 Face used when the customize item has been changed.
561 Parent groups: [Custom Magic Faces]
562 Attributes: [ ] Font Family: *
563 [ ] Width: *
564 [ ] Height: *
565 [ ] Weight: *
566 [ ] Slant: *
567 [ ] Underline: *
568 [ ] Overline: *
569 [ ] Strike-through: *
570 [ ] Box around text: *
571 [ ] Inverse-video: *
572 [X] Foreground: white (sample)
573 [X] Background: blue (sample)
574 [ ] Stipple: *
575 [ ] Inherit: *
576 @end smallexample
577
578 Each face attribute has its own line. The @samp{[@var{x}]} button
579 before the attribute name indicates whether the attribute is
580 @dfn{enabled}; @samp{[X]} means that it's enabled, and @samp{[ ]}
581 means that it's disabled. You can enable or disable the attribute by
582 clicking that button. When the attribute is enabled, you can change
583 the attribute value in the usual ways.
584
585 For the colors, you can specify a color name (use @kbd{M-x
586 list-colors-display} for a list of them) or a hexadecimal color
587 specification of the form @samp{#@var{rr}@var{gg}@var{bb}}.
588 (@samp{#000000} is black, @samp{#ff0000} is red, @samp{#00ff00} is
589 green, @samp{#0000ff} is blue, and @samp{#ffffff} is white.) On a
590 black-and-white display, the colors you can use for the background are
591 @samp{black}, @samp{white}, @samp{gray}, @samp{gray1}, and
592 @samp{gray3}. Emacs supports these shades of gray by using background
593 stipple patterns instead of a color.
594
595 Setting, saving and resetting a face work like the same operations for
596 variables (@pxref{Changing a Variable}).
597
598 A face can specify different appearances for different types of
599 display. For example, a face can make text red on a color display, but
600 use a bold font on a monochrome display. To specify multiple
601 appearances for a face, select @samp{For All Kinds of Displays} in the
602 menu you get from invoking @samp{[State]}.
603
604 @findex modify-face
605 Another more basic way to set the attributes of a specific face is
606 with @kbd{M-x modify-face}. This command reads the name of a face, then
607 reads the attributes one by one. For the color and stipple attributes,
608 the attribute's current value is the default---type just @key{RET} if
609 you don't want to change that attribute. Type @samp{none} if you want
610 to clear out the attribute.
611
612 @node Specific Customization
613 @subsection Customizing Specific Items
614
615 Instead of finding the setting you want to change by navigating the
616 structure of groups, here are other ways to specify the settings that
617 you want to customize.
618
619 @table @kbd
620 @item M-x customize-option @key{RET} @var{option} @key{RET}
621 Set up a customization buffer with just one user option variable,
622 @var{option}.
623 @item M-x customize-face @key{RET} @var{face} @key{RET}
624 Set up a customization buffer with just one face, @var{face}.
625 @item M-x customize-group @key{RET} @var{group} @key{RET}
626 Set up a customization buffer with just one group, @var{group}.
627 @item M-x customize-apropos @key{RET} @var{regexp} @key{RET}
628 Set up a customization buffer with all the settings and groups that
629 match @var{regexp}.
630 @item M-x customize-changed @key{RET} @var{version} @key{RET}
631 Set up a customization buffer with all the settings and groups
632 whose meaning has changed since Emacs version @var{version}.
633 @item M-x customize-saved
634 Set up a customization buffer containing all settings that you
635 have saved with customization buffers.
636 @item M-x customize-unsaved
637 Set up a customization buffer containing all settings that you have
638 set but not saved.
639 @end table
640
641 @findex customize-option
642 If you want to alter a particular user option with the customization
643 buffer, and you know its name, you can use the command @kbd{M-x
644 customize-option} and specify the user option (variable) name. This
645 sets up the customization buffer with just one user option---the one
646 that you asked for. Editing, setting and saving the value work as
647 described above, but only for the specified user option. Minibuffer
648 completion is handy if you only know part of the name. However, this
649 command can only see options that have been loaded in the current
650 Emacs session.
651
652 @findex customize-face
653 Likewise, you can modify a specific face, chosen by name, using
654 @kbd{M-x customize-face}. By default it operates on the face used
655 on the character after point.
656
657 @findex customize-group
658 You can also set up the customization buffer with a specific group,
659 using @kbd{M-x customize-group}. The immediate contents of the chosen
660 group, including settings (user options and faces), and other groups,
661 all appear as well (even if not already loaded). However, the
662 subgroups' own contents are not included.
663
664 @findex customize-apropos
665 For a more general way of controlling what to customize, you can use
666 @kbd{M-x customize-apropos}. You specify a regular expression as
667 argument; then all @emph{loaded} settings and groups whose names match
668 this regular expression are set up in the customization buffer. If
669 you specify an empty regular expression, this includes @emph{all}
670 loaded groups and settings---which takes a long time to set up.
671
672 @findex customize-changed
673 When you upgrade to a new Emacs version, you might want to consider
674 customizing new settings, and settings whose meanings or default
675 values have changed. To do this, use @kbd{M-x customize-changed} and
676 specify a previous Emacs version number using the minibuffer. It
677 creates a customization buffer which shows all the settings and groups
678 whose definitions have been changed since the specified version,
679 loading them if necessary.
680
681 @findex customize-saved
682 @findex customize-unsaved
683 If you change settings and then decide the change was a mistake, you
684 can use two special commands to revisit your previous changes. Use
685 @kbd{M-x customize-saved} to look at the settings that you have saved.
686 Use @kbd{M-x customize-unsaved} to look at the settings that you
687 have set but not saved.
688
689 @node Custom Themes
690 @subsection Customization Themes
691 @cindex custom themes
692
693 @dfn{Custom themes} are collections of settings that can be enabled
694 or disabled as a unit. You can use Custom themes to switch quickly
695 and easily between various collections of settings, and to transfer
696 such collections from one computer to another.
697
698 @findex customize-create-theme
699 To define a Custom theme, use @kbd{M-x customize-create-theme},
700 which brings up a buffer named @samp{*New Custom Theme*}. At the top
701 of the buffer is an editable field where you can specify the name of
702 the theme. Click on the button labelled @samp{Insert Variable} to add
703 a variable to the theme, and click on @samp{Insert Face} to add a
704 face. You can edit these values in the @samp{*New Custom Theme*}
705 buffer like in an ordinary Customize buffer. To remove an option from
706 the theme, click on its @samp{State} button and select @samp{Delete}.
707
708 @vindex custom-theme-directory
709 After adding the desired options, click on @samp{Save Theme} to save
710 the Custom theme. This writes the theme definition to a file
711 @file{@var{foo}-theme.el} (where @var{foo} is the theme name you
712 supplied), in the directory @file{~/.emacs.d/}. You can specify the
713 directory by setting @code{custom-theme-directory}.
714
715 You can view and edit the settings of a previously-defined theme by
716 clicking on @samp{Visit Theme} and specifying the theme name. You can
717 also import the variables and faces that you have set using Customize
718 by visiting the ``special'' theme named @samp{user}. This theme, which
719 records all the options that you set in the ordinary customization
720 buffer, is always enabled, and always takes precedence over all other
721 enabled Custom themes. Additionally, the @samp{user} theme is
722 recorded with code in your @file{.emacs} file, rather than a
723 @file{user-theme.el} file.
724
725 @vindex custom-enabled-themes
726 Once you have defined a Custom theme, you can use it by customizing
727 the variable @code{custom-enabled-themes}. This is a list of Custom
728 themes that are @dfn{enabled}, or put into effect. If you set
729 @code{custom-enabled-themes} using the Customize interface, the theme
730 definitions are automatically loaded from the theme files, if they
731 aren't already. If you save the value of @code{custom-enabled-themes}
732 for future Emacs sessions, those Custom themes will be enabled
733 whenever Emacs is started up.
734
735 If two enabled themes specify different values for an option, the
736 theme occurring earlier in @code{custom-enabled-themes} takes effect.
737
738 @findex load-theme
739 @findex enable-theme
740 @findex disable-theme
741 You can temporarily enable a Custom theme with @kbd{M-x
742 enable-theme}. This prompts for a theme name in the minibuffer, loads
743 the theme from the theme file if necessary, and enables the theme.
744 You can @dfn{disable} any enabled theme with the command @kbd{M-x
745 disable-theme}; this returns the options specified in the theme to
746 their original values. To re-enable the theme, type @kbd{M-x
747 enable-theme} again. If a theme file is changed during your Emacs
748 session, you can reload it by typing @kbd{M-x load-theme}. (This also
749 enables the theme.)
750
751 @node Variables
752 @section Variables
753 @cindex variable
754 @cindex option, user
755 @cindex user option
756
757 A @dfn{variable} is a Lisp symbol which has a value. The symbol's
758 name is also called the @dfn{variable name}. A variable name can
759 contain any characters that can appear in a file, but most variable
760 names consist of ordinary words separated by hyphens.
761
762 The name of the variable serves as a compact description of its
763 role. Most variables also have a @dfn{documentation string}, which
764 describes what the variable's purpose is, what kind of value it should
765 have, and how the value will be used. You can view this documentation
766 using the help command @kbd{C-h v} (@code{describe-variable}).
767 @xref{Examining}.
768
769 Emacs uses many Lisp variables for internal record keeping, but the
770 most interesting variables for a non-programmer user are those meant
771 for users to change---these are called @dfn{user options}. @xref{Easy
772 Customization}, for information about using the Customize facility to
773 set user options. In the following sections, we describe will other
774 aspects of Emacs variables, such as how to set them outside Customize.
775
776 Emacs Lisp allows any variable (with a few exceptions) to have any
777 kind of value. However, many variables are meaningful only if
778 assigned values of a certain type. For example, only numbers are
779 meaningful values for @code{kill-ring-max}, which specifies the
780 maximum length of the kill ring (@pxref{Earlier Kills}); if you give
781 @code{kill-ring-max} a string value, commands such as @kbd{C-y}
782 (@code{yank}) will signal an error. On the other hand, some variables
783 don't care about type; for instance, if a variable has one effect for
784 @code{nil} values and another effect for ``non-@code{nil}'' values,
785 then any value that is not the symbol @code{nil} induces the second
786 effect, regardless of its type (by convention, we usually use the
787 value @code{t}---a symbol which stands for ``true''---to specify a
788 non-@code{nil} value). If you set a variable using the customization
789 buffer, you need not worry about giving it an invalid type: the
790 customization buffer usually only allows you to enter meaningful
791 values. When in doubt, use @kbd{C-h v} (@code{describe-variable}) to
792 check the variable's documentation string to see kind of value it
793 expects (@pxref{Examining}).
794
795 @menu
796 * Examining:: Examining or setting one variable's value.
797 * Hooks:: Hook variables let you specify programs for parts
798 of Emacs to run on particular occasions.
799 * Locals:: Per-buffer values of variables.
800 * File Variables:: How files can specify variable values.
801 * Directory Variables:: How variable values can be specified by directory.
802 @end menu
803
804 @node Examining
805 @subsection Examining and Setting Variables
806 @cindex setting variables
807
808 @table @kbd
809 @item C-h v @var{var} @key{RET}
810 Display the value and documentation of variable @var{var}
811 (@code{describe-variable}).
812 @item M-x set-variable @key{RET} @var{var} @key{RET} @var{value} @key{RET}
813 Change the value of variable @var{var} to @var{value}.
814 @end table
815
816 To examine the value of a single variable, use @kbd{C-h v}
817 (@code{describe-variable}), which reads a variable name using the
818 minibuffer, with completion. It displays both the value and the
819 documentation of the variable. For example,
820
821 @example
822 C-h v fill-column @key{RET}
823 @end example
824
825 @noindent
826 displays something like this:
827
828 @smallexample
829 fill-column is a variable defined in `C source code'.
830 fill-column's value is 70
831 Local in buffer custom.texi; global value is 70
832 Automatically becomes buffer-local when set in any fashion.
833
834 Automatically becomes buffer-local when set in any fashion.
835 This variable is safe as a file local variable if its value
836 satisfies the predicate `integerp'.
837
838 Documentation:
839 *Column beyond which automatic line-wrapping should happen.
840 Interactively, you can set the buffer local value using C-x f.
841
842 You can customize this variable.
843 @end smallexample
844
845 @noindent
846 The line that says ``You can customize the variable'' indicates that
847 this variable is a user option. @kbd{C-h v} is not restricted to user
848 options; it allows any variable name.
849
850 @findex set-variable
851 The most convenient way to set a specific user option variable is
852 with @kbd{M-x set-variable}. This reads the variable name with the
853 minibuffer (with completion), and then reads a Lisp expression for the
854 new value using the minibuffer a second time (you can insert the old
855 value into the minibuffer for editing via @kbd{M-n}). For example,
856
857 @example
858 M-x set-variable @key{RET} fill-column @key{RET} 75 @key{RET}
859 @end example
860
861 @noindent
862 sets @code{fill-column} to 75.
863
864 @kbd{M-x set-variable} is limited to user option variables, but you can
865 set any variable with a Lisp expression, using the function @code{setq}.
866 Here is a @code{setq} expression to set @code{fill-column}:
867
868 @example
869 (setq fill-column 75)
870 @end example
871
872 To execute an expression like this one, go to the @samp{*scratch*}
873 buffer, type in the expression, and then type @kbd{C-j}. @xref{Lisp
874 Interaction}.
875
876 Setting variables, like all means of customizing Emacs except where
877 otherwise stated, affects only the current Emacs session. The only
878 way to alter the variable in future sessions is to put something in
879 your initialization file to set it those sessions (@pxref{Init File}).
880
881 @node Hooks
882 @subsection Hooks
883 @cindex hook
884 @cindex running a hook
885
886 @dfn{Hooks} are an important mechanism for customizing Emacs. A
887 hook is a Lisp variable which holds a list of functions, to be called
888 on some well-defined occasion. (This is called @dfn{running the
889 hook}.) The individual functions in the list are called the @dfn{hook
890 functions} of the hook. With rare exceptions, hooks in Emacs are
891 empty when Emacs starts up, so the only hook functions in any given
892 hook are the ones you explicitly put there as customization.
893
894 Most major modes run one or more @dfn{mode hooks} as the last step
895 of initialization. This makes it easy for you to customize the
896 behavior of the mode, by setting up a hook function to override the
897 local variable assignments already made by the mode. But hooks are
898 also used in other contexts. For example, the hook
899 @code{kill-emacs-hook} runs just before quitting the Emacs job
900 (@pxref{Exiting}).
901
902 @cindex normal hook
903 Most Emacs hooks are @dfn{normal hooks}. This means that running the
904 hook operates by calling all the hook functions, unconditionally, with
905 no arguments. We have made an effort to keep most hooks normal so that
906 you can use them in a uniform way. Every variable in Emacs whose name
907 ends in @samp{-hook} is a normal hook.
908
909 @cindex abnormal hook
910 There are also a few @dfn{abnormal hooks}. These variables' names end
911 in @samp{-hooks} or @samp{-functions}, instead of @samp{-hook}. What
912 makes these hooks abnormal is that there is something peculiar about the
913 way its functions are called---perhaps they are given arguments, or
914 perhaps the values they return are used in some way. For example,
915 @code{find-file-not-found-functions} (@pxref{Visiting}) is abnormal because
916 as soon as one hook function returns a non-@code{nil} value, the rest
917 are not called at all. The documentation of each abnormal hook variable
918 explains in detail what is peculiar about it.
919
920 @findex add-hook
921 You can set a hook variable with @code{setq} like any other Lisp
922 variable, but the recommended way to add a hook function to a hook
923 (either normal or abnormal) is by calling @code{add-hook}.
924 @xref{Hooks,,, elisp, The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.
925
926 For example, here's how to set up a hook to turn on Auto Fill mode
927 when entering Text mode and other modes based on Text mode:
928
929 @example
930 (add-hook 'text-mode-hook 'turn-on-auto-fill)
931 @end example
932
933 The next example shows how to use a hook to customize the indentation
934 of C code. (People often have strong personal preferences for one
935 format compared to another.) Here the hook function is an anonymous
936 lambda expression.
937
938 @example
939 @group
940 (setq my-c-style
941 '((c-comment-only-line-offset . 4)
942 @end group
943 @group
944 (c-cleanup-list . (scope-operator
945 empty-defun-braces
946 defun-close-semi))
947 @end group
948 @group
949 (c-offsets-alist . ((arglist-close . c-lineup-arglist)
950 (substatement-open . 0)))))
951 @end group
952
953 @group
954 (add-hook 'c-mode-common-hook
955 '(lambda ()
956 (c-add-style "my-style" my-c-style t)))
957 @end group
958 @end example
959
960 It is best to design your hook functions so that the order in which
961 they are executed does not matter. Any dependence on the order is
962 ``asking for trouble.'' However, the order is predictable: the most
963 recently added hook functions are executed first.
964
965 @findex remove-hook
966 If you play with adding various different versions of a hook
967 function by calling @code{add-hook} over and over, remember that all
968 the versions you added will remain in the hook variable together. You
969 can clear out individual functions by calling @code{remove-hook}, or
970 do @code{(setq @var{hook-variable} nil)} to remove everything.
971
972 @node Locals
973 @subsection Local Variables
974
975 @table @kbd
976 @item M-x make-local-variable @key{RET} @var{var} @key{RET}
977 Make variable @var{var} have a local value in the current buffer.
978 @item M-x kill-local-variable @key{RET} @var{var} @key{RET}
979 Make variable @var{var} use its global value in the current buffer.
980 @item M-x make-variable-buffer-local @key{RET} @var{var} @key{RET}
981 Mark variable @var{var} so that setting it will make it local to the
982 buffer that is current at that time.
983 @end table
984
985 @cindex local variables
986 Almost any variable can be made @dfn{local} to a specific Emacs
987 buffer. This means that its value in that buffer is independent of its
988 value in other buffers. A few variables are always local in every
989 buffer. Every other Emacs variable has a @dfn{global} value which is in
990 effect in all buffers that have not made the variable local.
991
992 @findex make-local-variable
993 @kbd{M-x make-local-variable} reads the name of a variable and makes
994 it local to the current buffer. Changing its value subsequently in
995 this buffer will not affect others, and changes in its global value
996 will not affect this buffer.
997
998 @findex make-variable-buffer-local
999 @cindex per-buffer variables
1000 @kbd{M-x make-variable-buffer-local} marks a variable so it will
1001 become local automatically whenever it is set. More precisely, once a
1002 variable has been marked in this way, the usual ways of setting the
1003 variable automatically do @code{make-local-variable} first. We call
1004 such variables @dfn{per-buffer} variables. Many variables in Emacs
1005 are normally per-buffer; the variable's document string tells you when
1006 this is so. A per-buffer variable's global value is normally never
1007 effective in any buffer, but it still has a meaning: it is the initial
1008 value of the variable for each new buffer.
1009
1010 Major modes (@pxref{Major Modes}) always make variables local to the
1011 buffer before setting the variables. This is why changing major modes
1012 in one buffer has no effect on other buffers. Minor modes also work
1013 by setting variables---normally, each minor mode has one controlling
1014 variable which is non-@code{nil} when the mode is enabled
1015 (@pxref{Minor Modes}). For many minor modes, the controlling variable
1016 is per buffer, and thus always buffer-local. Otherwise, you can make
1017 it local in a specific buffer like any other variable.
1018
1019 A few variables cannot be local to a buffer because they are always
1020 local to each display instead (@pxref{Multiple Displays}). If you try to
1021 make one of these variables buffer-local, you'll get an error message.
1022
1023 @findex kill-local-variable
1024 @kbd{M-x kill-local-variable} makes a specified variable cease to be
1025 local to the current buffer. The global value of the variable
1026 henceforth is in effect in this buffer. Setting the major mode kills
1027 all the local variables of the buffer except for a few variables
1028 specially marked as @dfn{permanent locals}.
1029
1030 @findex setq-default
1031 To set the global value of a variable, regardless of whether the
1032 variable has a local value in the current buffer, you can use the Lisp
1033 construct @code{setq-default}. This construct is used just like
1034 @code{setq}, but it sets variables' global values instead of their local
1035 values (if any). When the current buffer does have a local value, the
1036 new global value may not be visible until you switch to another buffer.
1037 Here is an example:
1038
1039 @example
1040 (setq-default fill-column 75)
1041 @end example
1042
1043 @noindent
1044 @code{setq-default} is the only way to set the global value of a variable
1045 that has been marked with @code{make-variable-buffer-local}.
1046
1047 @findex default-value
1048 Lisp programs can use @code{default-value} to look at a variable's
1049 default value. This function takes a symbol as argument and returns its
1050 default value. The argument is evaluated; usually you must quote it
1051 explicitly. For example, here's how to obtain the default value of
1052 @code{fill-column}:
1053
1054 @example
1055 (default-value 'fill-column)
1056 @end example
1057
1058 @node File Variables
1059 @subsection Local Variables in Files
1060 @cindex local variables in files
1061 @cindex file local variables
1062
1063 A file can specify local variable values for use when you edit the
1064 file with Emacs. Visiting the file checks for local variable
1065 specifications; it automatically makes these variables local to the
1066 buffer, and sets them to the values specified in the file.
1067
1068 @menu
1069 * Specifying File Variables:: Specifying file local variables.
1070 * Safe File Variables:: Making sure file local variables are safe.
1071 @end menu
1072
1073 @node Specifying File Variables
1074 @subsubsection Specifying File Variables
1075
1076 There are two ways to specify file local variable values: in the first
1077 line, or with a local variables list. Here's how to specify them in the
1078 first line:
1079
1080 @example
1081 -*- mode: @var{modename}; @var{var}: @var{value}; @dots{} -*-
1082 @end example
1083
1084 @noindent
1085 You can specify any number of variables/value pairs in this way, each
1086 pair with a colon and semicolon as shown above. @code{mode:
1087 @var{modename};} specifies the major mode; this should come first in the
1088 line. The @var{value}s are not evaluated; they are used literally.
1089 Here is an example that specifies Lisp mode and sets two variables with
1090 numeric values:
1091
1092 @smallexample
1093 ;; -*- mode: Lisp; fill-column: 75; comment-column: 50; -*-
1094 @end smallexample
1095
1096 You can also specify the coding system for a file in this way: just
1097 specify a value for the ``variable'' named @code{coding}. The ``value''
1098 must be a coding system name that Emacs recognizes. @xref{Coding
1099 Systems}. @w{@samp{unibyte: t}} specifies unibyte loading for a
1100 particular Lisp file. @xref{Enabling Multibyte}.
1101
1102 The @code{eval} pseudo-variable, described below, can be specified in
1103 the first line as well.
1104
1105 @cindex shell scripts, and local file variables
1106 @cindex man pages, and local file variables
1107 In shell scripts, the first line is used to identify the script
1108 interpreter, so you cannot put any local variables there. To
1109 accommodate this, Emacs looks for local variable specifications in the
1110 @emph{second} line when the first line specifies an interpreter.
1111 The same is true for man pages which start with the magic string
1112 @samp{'\"} to specify a list of troff preprocessors (not all do,
1113 however).
1114
1115 A @dfn{local variables list} goes near the end of the file. It
1116 starts with a line containing the string @samp{Local Variables:}, and
1117 ends with a line containing the string @samp{End:}. In between come
1118 the variable names and values, one set per line, as
1119 @samp{@var{variable}:@: @var{value}}. The @var{value}s are not
1120 evaluated; they are used literally. If a file has both a local
1121 variables list and a @samp{-*-} line, Emacs processes
1122 @emph{everything} in the @samp{-*-} line first, and @emph{everything}
1123 in the local variables list afterward.
1124
1125 Here is an example of a local variables list:
1126
1127 @example
1128 /* Local Variables: */
1129 /* mode:c */
1130 /* comment-column:0 */
1131 /* End: */
1132 @end example
1133
1134 In this example, each line starts with the prefix @samp{/*} and each
1135 line ends with the suffix @samp{*/}. Emacs recognizes these as the
1136 prefix and suffix by finding them surrounding the magic string
1137 @samp{Local Variables:}, on the first line of the list; it then
1138 automatically discards them from the other lines of the list.
1139
1140 The usual reason for using a prefix and/or suffix is to embed the
1141 local variables list in a comment, so it won't confuse other programs
1142 that the file is intended as input for. The example above is for the
1143 C programming language, where comment lines start with @samp{/*} and
1144 end with @samp{*/}. Don't use a prefix (or a suffix) if you don't
1145 need one.
1146
1147 If you write a multi-line string value, you should put the prefix
1148 and suffix on each line, even lines that start or end within the
1149 string. They will be stripped off for processing the list. If you
1150 want to split a long string across multiple lines of the file, you can
1151 use backslash-newline, which is ignored in Lisp string constants.
1152 Here's an example of doing this:
1153
1154 @example
1155 # Local Variables:
1156 # compile-command: "cc foo.c -Dfoo=bar -Dhack=whatever \
1157 # -Dmumble=blaah"
1158 # End:
1159 @end example
1160
1161 Some ``variable names'' have special meanings in a local variables
1162 list. Specifying the ``variable'' @code{mode} really sets the major
1163 mode, while any value specified for the ``variable'' @code{eval} is
1164 simply evaluated as an expression (its value is ignored). A value for
1165 @code{coding} specifies the coding system for character code
1166 conversion of this file, and a value of @code{t} for @code{unibyte}
1167 says to visit the file in a unibyte buffer. These four ``variables''
1168 are not really variables; setting them in any other context has no
1169 special meaning.
1170
1171 @emph{If @code{mode} is used to set a major mode, it should be the
1172 first ``variable'' in the list.} Otherwise, the entries that precede
1173 it will usually be ignored, since most modes kill all local variables
1174 as part of their initialization.
1175
1176 You can use the @code{mode} ``variable'' to set minor modes as well
1177 as the major modes; in fact, you can use it more than once, first to
1178 set the major mode and then to set minor modes which are specific to
1179 particular buffers. But most minor modes should not be specified in
1180 the file at all, because they represent user preferences.
1181
1182 For example, you may be tempted to try to turn on Auto Fill mode with
1183 a local variable list. That is a mistake. The choice of Auto Fill mode
1184 or not is a matter of individual taste, not a matter of the contents of
1185 particular files. If you want to use Auto Fill, set up major mode hooks
1186 with your @file{.emacs} file to turn it on (when appropriate) for you
1187 alone (@pxref{Init File}). Don't use a local variable list to impose
1188 your taste on everyone.
1189
1190 The start of the local variables list must be no more than 3000
1191 characters from the end of the file, and must be in the last page if
1192 the file is divided into pages. Otherwise, Emacs will not notice it
1193 is there. The purpose of this rule is so that Emacs need not take the
1194 time to search the whole file.
1195
1196 Use the command @code{normal-mode} to reset the local variables and
1197 major mode of a buffer according to the file name and contents,
1198 including the local variables list if any. @xref{Choosing Modes}.
1199
1200 @node Safe File Variables
1201 @subsubsection Safety of File Variables
1202
1203 File-local variables can be dangerous; when you visit someone else's
1204 file, there's no telling what its local variables list could do to
1205 your Emacs. Improper values of the @code{eval} ``variable,'' and
1206 other variables such as @code{load-path}, could execute Lisp code you
1207 didn't intend to run.
1208
1209 Therefore, whenever Emacs encounters file local variable values that
1210 are not known to be safe, it displays the file's entire local
1211 variables list, and asks you for confirmation before setting them.
1212 You can type @kbd{y} or @key{SPC} to put the local variables list into
1213 effect, or @kbd{n} to ignore it. When Emacs is run in batch mode
1214 (@pxref{Initial Options}), it can't really ask you, so it assumes the
1215 answer @kbd{n}.
1216
1217 Emacs normally recognizes certain variables/value pairs as safe.
1218 For instance, it is safe to give @code{comment-column} or
1219 @code{fill-column} any integer value. If a file specifies only
1220 known-safe variable/value pairs, Emacs does not ask for confirmation
1221 before setting them. Otherwise, you can tell Emacs to record all the
1222 variable/value pairs in this file as safe, by typing @kbd{!} at the
1223 confirmation prompt. When Emacs encounters these variable/value pairs
1224 subsequently, in the same file or others, it will assume they are
1225 safe.
1226
1227 @vindex safe-local-variable-values
1228 @cindex risky variable
1229 Some variables, such as @code{load-path}, are considered
1230 particularly @dfn{risky}: there is seldom any reason to specify them
1231 as local variables, and changing them can be dangerous. If a file
1232 contains only risky local variables, Emacs neither offers nor accepts
1233 @kbd{!} as input at the confirmation prompt. If some of the local
1234 variables in a file are risky, and some are only potentially unsafe, you
1235 can enter @kbd{!} at the prompt. It applies all the variables, but only
1236 marks the non-risky ones as safe for the future. If you really want to
1237 record safe values for risky variables, do it directly by customizing
1238 @samp{safe-local-variable-values} (@pxref{Easy Customization}).
1239
1240 @vindex enable-local-variables
1241 The variable @code{enable-local-variables} allows you to change the
1242 way Emacs processes local variables. Its default value is @code{t},
1243 which specifies the behavior described above. If it is @code{nil},
1244 Emacs simply ignores all file local variables. @code{:safe} means use
1245 only the safe values and ignore the rest. Any other value says to
1246 query you about each file that has local variables, without trying to
1247 determine whether the values are known to be safe.
1248
1249 @vindex enable-local-eval
1250 The variable @code{enable-local-eval} controls whether Emacs
1251 processes @code{eval} variables. The three possibilities for the
1252 variable's value are @code{t}, @code{nil}, and anything else, just as
1253 for @code{enable-local-variables}. The default is @code{maybe}, which
1254 is neither @code{t} nor @code{nil}, so normally Emacs does ask for
1255 confirmation about processing @code{eval} variables.
1256
1257 @vindex safe-local-eval-forms
1258 But there is an exception. The @code{safe-local-eval-forms} is a
1259 customizable list of eval forms which are safe. Emacs does not ask
1260 for confirmation when it finds these forms for the @code{eval}
1261 variable.
1262
1263 @node Directory Variables
1264 @subsection Per-Directory Local Variables
1265 @cindex local variables, for all files in a directory
1266 @cindex directory local variables
1267 @cindex per-directory local variables
1268
1269 A @dfn{project} is a collection of files on which you work together.
1270 Usually, the project's files are kept in one or more directories.
1271 Occasionally, you may wish to define Emacs settings that are common to
1272 all the files that belong to the project.
1273
1274 Emacs provides two ways to specify settings that are applicable to
1275 files in a specific directory: you can put a special file in that
1276 directory, or you can define a @dfn{project class} for that directory.
1277
1278 @cindex @file{.dir-locals.el} file
1279 If you put a file with a special name @file{.dir-locals.el}@footnote{
1280 On MS-DOS, the name of this file should be @file{_dir-locals.el}, due
1281 to limitations of the DOS filesystems. If the filesystem is limited
1282 to 8+3 file names, the name of the file will be truncated by the OS to
1283 @file{_dir-loc.el}.
1284 } in a directory, Emacs will read it when it visits any file in that
1285 directory or any of its subdirectories, and apply the settings it
1286 specifies to the file's buffer. Emacs searches for
1287 @file{.dir-locals.el} starting in the directory of the visited file,
1288 and moving up the directory tree. (To avoid slowdown, this search is
1289 skipped for remote files.)
1290
1291 The @file{.dir-locals.el} file should hold a specially-constructed
1292 list. This list maps Emacs mode names (symbols) to alists; each alist
1293 specifies values for variables to use when the respective mode is
1294 turned on. The special mode name @samp{nil} means that its alist
1295 applies to any mode. Instead of a mode name, you can specify a string
1296 that is a name of a subdirectory of the project's directory; then the
1297 corresponding alist applies to all the files in that subdirectory.
1298
1299 Here's an example of a @file{.dir-locals.el} file:
1300
1301 @example
1302 ((nil . ((indent-tabs-mode . t)
1303 (tab-width . 4)
1304 (fill-column . 80)))
1305 (c-mode . ((c-file-style . "BSD")))
1306 (java-mode . ((c-file-style . "BSD")))
1307 ("src/imported"
1308 . ((nil . ((change-log-default-name . "ChangeLog.local"))))))
1309 @end example
1310
1311 @noindent
1312 This example shows some settings for a hypothetical project. It sets
1313 @samp{indent-tabs-mode}, @code{tab-width}, and @code{fill-column} for
1314 any file in the project's directory tree, and it sets the indentation
1315 style for any C or Java source file. Finally, it specifies a different
1316 @file{ChangeLog} file name for any file in the @file{src/imported}
1317 subdirectory of the directory where you put the @file{.dir-locals.el}
1318 file.
1319
1320 @findex dir-locals-set-class-variables
1321 @findex dir-locals-set-directory-class
1322 Another method of specifying directory-local variables is to explicitly
1323 define a project class using @code{dir-locals-set-class-variables}, and
1324 then tell Emacs which directories correspond to that class, using
1325 @code{dir-locals-set-directory-class}. You can put calls to these functions
1326 in your @file{~/.emacs} init file; this can be useful when you can't put
1327 @file{.dir-locals.el} in the directory for some reason, or if you want
1328 to keep in a single place settings for several directories that don't
1329 have a common parent. For example, you could apply settings to an
1330 unwritable directory this way:
1331
1332 @example
1333 (dir-locals-set-class-variables 'unwritable-directory
1334 '((nil . ((some-useful-setting . value)))))
1335
1336 (dir-locals-set-directory-class
1337 "/usr/include/" 'unwritable-directory)
1338 @end example
1339
1340 Unsafe directory-local variables are handled in the same way as
1341 unsafe file-local variables (@pxref{Safe File Variables}).
1342
1343 @node Key Bindings
1344 @section Customizing Key Bindings
1345 @cindex key bindings
1346
1347 This section describes @dfn{key bindings}, which map keys to commands,
1348 and @dfn{keymaps}, which record key bindings. It also explains how
1349 to customize key bindings.
1350
1351 Recall that a command is a Lisp function whose definition provides for
1352 interactive use. Like every Lisp function, a command has a function
1353 name, which usually consists of lower-case letters and hyphens.
1354
1355 @menu
1356 * Keymaps:: Generalities. The global keymap.
1357 * Prefix Keymaps:: Keymaps for prefix keys.
1358 * Local Keymaps:: Major and minor modes have their own keymaps.
1359 * Minibuffer Maps:: The minibuffer uses its own local keymaps.
1360 * Rebinding:: How to redefine one key's meaning conveniently.
1361 * Init Rebinding:: Rebinding keys with your init file, @file{.emacs}.
1362 * Modifier Keys:: Using modifier keys in key bindings.
1363 * Function Keys:: Rebinding terminal function keys.
1364 * Named ASCII Chars:: Distinguishing @key{TAB} from @kbd{C-i}, and so on.
1365 * Mouse Buttons:: Rebinding mouse buttons in Emacs.
1366 * Disabling:: Disabling a command means confirmation is required
1367 before it can be executed. This is done to protect
1368 beginners from surprises.
1369 @end menu
1370
1371 @node Keymaps
1372 @subsection Keymaps
1373 @cindex keymap
1374
1375 The bindings between key sequences and command functions are recorded
1376 in data structures called @dfn{keymaps}. Emacs has many of these, each
1377 used on particular occasions.
1378
1379 A @dfn{key sequence} (@dfn{key}, for short) is a sequence of
1380 @dfn{input events} that have a meaning as a unit. Input events
1381 include characters, function keys and mouse buttons---all the inputs
1382 that you can send to the computer with your terminal. A key sequence
1383 gets its meaning from its @dfn{binding}, which says what command it
1384 runs. The role of keymaps is to record these bindings.
1385
1386 @cindex global keymap
1387 The @dfn{global} keymap is the most important keymap because it is
1388 always in effect. The global keymap defines keys for Fundamental mode;
1389 most of these definitions are common to most or all major modes. Each
1390 major or minor mode can have its own keymap which overrides the global
1391 definitions of some keys.
1392
1393 For example, a self-inserting character such as @kbd{g} is
1394 self-inserting because the global keymap binds it to the command
1395 @code{self-insert-command}. The standard Emacs editing characters such
1396 as @kbd{C-a} also get their standard meanings from the global keymap.
1397 Commands to rebind keys, such as @kbd{M-x global-set-key}, actually work
1398 by storing the new binding in the proper place in the global map.
1399 @xref{Rebinding}.
1400
1401 @cindex function key
1402 Most modern keyboards have function keys as well as character keys.
1403 Function keys send input events just as character keys do, and keymaps
1404 can have bindings for them. On text terminals, typing a function key
1405 actually sends the computer a sequence of characters; the precise
1406 details of the sequence depends on which function key and on the model
1407 of terminal you are using. (Often the sequence starts with
1408 @kbd{@key{ESC} [}.) If Emacs understands your terminal type properly,
1409 it recognizes the character sequences forming function keys wherever
1410 they occur in a key sequence. Thus, for most purposes, you can
1411 pretend the function keys reach Emacs directly and ignore their
1412 encoding as character sequences.
1413
1414 Key sequences can mix function keys and characters. For example, if
1415 your keyboard has a @key{Home} function key, Emacs also recognizes key
1416 sequences like @kbd{C-x @key{Home}}. You can even mix mouse events
1417 with keyboard events, but we recommend against it, because such key
1418 sequences are inconvenient to use.
1419
1420 As a user, you can redefine any key, but it is usually best to stick
1421 to key sequences that consist of @kbd{C-c} followed by a letter (upper
1422 or lower case). These keys are ``reserved for users,'' so they won't
1423 conflict with any properly designed Emacs extension. The function
1424 keys @key{F5} through @key{F9} are also reserved for users. If you
1425 redefine some other key, your definition may be overridden by certain
1426 extensions or major modes which redefine the same key.
1427
1428 @node Prefix Keymaps
1429 @subsection Prefix Keymaps
1430
1431 Internally, Emacs records only single events in each keymap.
1432 Interpreting a key sequence of multiple events involves a chain of
1433 keymaps: the first keymap gives a definition for the first event,
1434 which is another keymap, which is used to look up the second event in
1435 the sequence, and so on. Thus, a prefix key such as @kbd{C-x} or
1436 @key{ESC} has its own keymap, which holds the definition for the event
1437 that immediately follows that prefix.
1438
1439 The definition of a prefix key is usually the keymap to use for
1440 looking up the following event. The definition can also be a Lisp
1441 symbol whose function definition is the following keymap; the effect is
1442 the same, but it provides a command name for the prefix key that can be
1443 used as a description of what the prefix key is for. Thus, the binding
1444 of @kbd{C-x} is the symbol @code{Control-X-prefix}, whose function
1445 definition is the keymap for @kbd{C-x} commands. The definitions of
1446 @kbd{C-c}, @kbd{C-x}, @kbd{C-h} and @key{ESC} as prefix keys appear in
1447 the global map, so these prefix keys are always available.
1448
1449 Aside from ordinary prefix keys, there is a fictitious ``prefix key''
1450 which represents the menu bar; see @ref{Menu Bar,,,elisp, The Emacs Lisp
1451 Reference Manual}, for special information about menu bar key bindings.
1452 Mouse button events that invoke pop-up menus are also prefix keys; see
1453 @ref{Menu Keymaps,,,elisp, The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}, for more
1454 details.
1455
1456 Some prefix keymaps are stored in variables with names:
1457
1458 @itemize @bullet
1459 @item
1460 @vindex ctl-x-map
1461 @code{ctl-x-map} is the variable name for the map used for characters that
1462 follow @kbd{C-x}.
1463 @item
1464 @vindex help-map
1465 @code{help-map} is for characters that follow @kbd{C-h}.
1466 @item
1467 @vindex esc-map
1468 @code{esc-map} is for characters that follow @key{ESC}. Thus, all Meta
1469 characters are actually defined by this map.
1470 @item
1471 @vindex ctl-x-4-map
1472 @code{ctl-x-4-map} is for characters that follow @kbd{C-x 4}.
1473 @item
1474 @vindex mode-specific-map
1475 @code{mode-specific-map} is for characters that follow @kbd{C-c}.
1476 @end itemize
1477
1478 @node Local Keymaps
1479 @subsection Local Keymaps
1480
1481 @cindex local keymap
1482 So far we have explained the ins and outs of the global map. Major
1483 modes customize Emacs by providing their own key bindings in @dfn{local
1484 keymaps}. For example, C mode overrides @key{TAB} to make it indent the
1485 current line for C code. Portions of text in the buffer can specify
1486 their own keymaps to substitute for the keymap of the buffer's major
1487 mode.
1488
1489 @cindex minor mode keymap
1490 Minor modes can also have local keymaps. Whenever a minor mode is
1491 in effect, the definitions in its keymap override both the major
1492 mode's local keymap and the global keymap.
1493
1494 A local keymap can locally redefine a key as a prefix key by defining
1495 it as a prefix keymap. If the key is also defined globally as a prefix,
1496 then its local and global definitions (both keymaps) effectively
1497 combine: both of them are used to look up the event that follows the
1498 prefix key. Thus, if the mode's local keymap defines @kbd{C-c} as
1499 another keymap, and that keymap defines @kbd{C-z} as a command, this
1500 provides a local meaning for @kbd{C-c C-z}. This does not affect other
1501 sequences that start with @kbd{C-c}; if those sequences don't have their
1502 own local bindings, their global bindings remain in effect.
1503
1504 Another way to think of this is that Emacs handles a multi-event key
1505 sequence by looking in several keymaps, one by one, for a binding of the
1506 whole key sequence. First it checks the minor mode keymaps for minor
1507 modes that are enabled, then it checks the major mode's keymap, and then
1508 it checks the global keymap. This is not precisely how key lookup
1509 works, but it's good enough for understanding the results in ordinary
1510 circumstances.
1511
1512 @cindex rebinding major mode keys
1513 Most major modes construct their keymaps when the mode is used for
1514 the first time in a session. If you wish to change one of these
1515 keymaps, you must use the major mode's @dfn{mode hook}
1516 (@pxref{Hooks}).
1517
1518 @findex define-key
1519 For example, the command @code{texinfo-mode} to select Texinfo mode
1520 runs the hook @code{texinfo-mode-hook}. Here's how you can use the hook
1521 to add local bindings (not very useful, we admit) for @kbd{C-c n} and
1522 @kbd{C-c p} in Texinfo mode:
1523
1524 @example
1525 (add-hook 'texinfo-mode-hook
1526 '(lambda ()
1527 (define-key texinfo-mode-map "\C-cp"
1528 'backward-paragraph)
1529 (define-key texinfo-mode-map "\C-cn"
1530 'forward-paragraph)))
1531 @end example
1532
1533 @node Minibuffer Maps
1534 @subsection Minibuffer Keymaps
1535
1536 @cindex minibuffer keymaps
1537 @vindex minibuffer-local-map
1538 @vindex minibuffer-local-ns-map
1539 @vindex minibuffer-local-completion-map
1540 @vindex minibuffer-local-must-match-map
1541 @vindex minibuffer-local-filename-completion-map
1542 @vindex minibuffer-local-must-match-filename-map
1543 The minibuffer has its own set of local keymaps; they contain various
1544 completion and exit commands.
1545
1546 @itemize @bullet
1547 @item
1548 @code{minibuffer-local-map} is used for ordinary input (no completion).
1549 @item
1550 @code{minibuffer-local-ns-map} is similar, except that @key{SPC} exits
1551 just like @key{RET}. This is used mainly for Mocklisp compatibility.
1552 @item
1553 @code{minibuffer-local-completion-map} is for permissive completion.
1554 @item
1555 @code{minibuffer-local-must-match-map} is for strict completion and
1556 for cautious completion.
1557 @item
1558 Finally, @code{minibuffer-local-filename-completion-map} and
1559 @code{minibuffer-local-must-match-filename-map} are like the two
1560 previous ones, but they are specifically for file name completion.
1561 They do not bind @key{SPC}.
1562 @end itemize
1563
1564 @node Rebinding
1565 @subsection Changing Key Bindings Interactively
1566 @cindex key rebinding, this session
1567 @cindex redefining keys, this session
1568
1569 The way to redefine an Emacs key is to change its entry in a keymap.
1570 You can change the global keymap, in which case the change is effective in
1571 all major modes (except those that have their own overriding local
1572 definitions for the same key). Or you can change the current buffer's
1573 local map, which affects all buffers using the same major mode.
1574
1575 @findex global-set-key
1576 @findex local-set-key
1577 @findex global-unset-key
1578 @findex local-unset-key
1579 @table @kbd
1580 @item M-x global-set-key @key{RET} @var{key} @var{cmd} @key{RET}
1581 Define @var{key} globally to run @var{cmd}.
1582 @item M-x local-set-key @key{RET} @var{key} @var{cmd} @key{RET}
1583 Define @var{key} locally (in the major mode now in effect) to run
1584 @var{cmd}.
1585 @item M-x global-unset-key @key{RET} @var{key}
1586 Make @var{key} undefined in the global map.
1587 @item M-x local-unset-key @key{RET} @var{key}
1588 Make @var{key} undefined locally (in the major mode now in effect).
1589 @end table
1590
1591 For example, suppose you like to execute commands in a subshell within
1592 an Emacs buffer, instead of suspending Emacs and executing commands in
1593 your login shell. Normally, @kbd{C-z} is bound to the function
1594 @code{suspend-emacs} (when not using the X Window System), but you can
1595 change @kbd{C-z} to invoke an interactive subshell within Emacs, by
1596 binding it to @code{shell} as follows:
1597
1598 @example
1599 M-x global-set-key @key{RET} C-z shell @key{RET}
1600 @end example
1601
1602 @noindent
1603 @code{global-set-key} reads the command name after the key. After you
1604 press the key, a message like this appears so that you can confirm that
1605 you are binding the key you want:
1606
1607 @example
1608 Set key C-z to command:
1609 @end example
1610
1611 You can redefine function keys and mouse events in the same way; just
1612 type the function key or click the mouse when it's time to specify the
1613 key to rebind.
1614
1615 You can rebind a key that contains more than one event in the same
1616 way. Emacs keeps reading the key to rebind until it is a complete key
1617 (that is, not a prefix key). Thus, if you type @kbd{C-f} for
1618 @var{key}, that's the end; it enters the minibuffer immediately to
1619 read @var{cmd}. But if you type @kbd{C-x}, since that's a prefix, it
1620 reads another character; if that is @kbd{4}, another prefix character,
1621 it reads one more character, and so on. For example,
1622
1623 @example
1624 M-x global-set-key @key{RET} C-x 4 $ spell-other-window @key{RET}
1625 @end example
1626
1627 @noindent
1628 redefines @kbd{C-x 4 $} to run the (fictitious) command
1629 @code{spell-other-window}.
1630
1631 You can remove the global definition of a key with
1632 @code{global-unset-key}. This makes the key @dfn{undefined}; if you
1633 type it, Emacs will just beep. Similarly, @code{local-unset-key} makes
1634 a key undefined in the current major mode keymap, which makes the global
1635 definition (or lack of one) come back into effect in that major mode.
1636
1637 If you have redefined (or undefined) a key and you subsequently wish
1638 to retract the change, undefining the key will not do the job---you need
1639 to redefine the key with its standard definition. To find the name of
1640 the standard definition of a key, go to a Fundamental mode buffer in a
1641 fresh Emacs and use @kbd{C-h c}. The documentation of keys in this
1642 manual also lists their command names.
1643
1644 If you want to prevent yourself from invoking a command by mistake, it
1645 is better to disable the command than to undefine the key. A disabled
1646 command is less work to invoke when you really want to.
1647 @xref{Disabling}.
1648
1649 @node Init Rebinding
1650 @subsection Rebinding Keys in Your Init File
1651 @c This node is referenced in the tutorial. When renaming or deleting
1652 @c it, the tutorial needs to be adjusted. (TUTORIAL.de)
1653
1654 If you have a set of key bindings that you like to use all the time,
1655 you can specify them in your initialization file by writing Lisp code
1656 (@pxref{Init File}).
1657
1658 @findex kbd
1659 There are several ways to write a key binding using Lisp. The
1660 simplest is to use the @code{kbd} macro, which converts a textual
1661 representation of a key sequence---similar to how we have written key
1662 sequences in this manual---into a form that can be passed as an
1663 argument to @code{global-set-key}. For example, here's how to bind
1664 @kbd{C-z} to @code{shell} (@pxref{Interactive Shell}):
1665
1666 @example
1667 (global-set-key (kbd "C-z") 'shell)
1668 @end example
1669
1670 @noindent
1671 The single-quote before the command name, @code{shell}, marks it as a
1672 constant symbol rather than a variable. If you omit the quote, Emacs
1673 would try to evaluate @code{shell} as a variable. This probably
1674 causes an error; it certainly isn't what you want.
1675
1676 Here are some additional examples, including binding function keys
1677 and mouse events:
1678
1679 @example
1680 (global-set-key (kbd "C-c y") 'clipboard-yank)
1681 (global-set-key (kbd "C-M-q") 'query-replace)
1682 (global-set-key (kbd "<f5>") 'flyspell-mode)
1683 (global-set-key (kbd "C-<f5>") 'linum-mode)
1684 (global-set-key (kbd "C-<right>") 'forward-sentence)
1685 (global-set-key (kbd "<mouse-2>") 'mouse-save-then-kill)
1686 (global-set-key (kbd "C-<down-mouse-3>") 'mouse-yank-at-click)
1687 @end example
1688
1689 Instead of using the @code{kbd} macro, you can use a Lisp string or
1690 vector to specify the key sequence. Using a string is simpler, but
1691 only works for @acronym{ASCII} characters and Meta-modified
1692 @acronym{ASCII} characters. For example, here's how to bind @kbd{C-x
1693 M-l} to @code{make-symbolic-link} (@pxref{Misc File Ops}):
1694
1695 @example
1696 (global-set-key "\C-x\M-l" 'make-symbolic-link)
1697 @end example
1698
1699 To put @key{TAB}, @key{RET}, @key{ESC}, or @key{DEL} in the string,
1700 use the Emacs Lisp escape sequences @samp{\t}, @samp{\r}, @samp{\e},
1701 and @samp{\d} respectively. Here is an example which binds @kbd{C-x
1702 @key{TAB}} to @code{indent-rigidly} (@pxref{Indentation}):
1703
1704 @example
1705 (global-set-key "\C-x\t" 'indent-rigidly)
1706 @end example
1707
1708 When the key sequence includes function keys or mouse button events,
1709 or non-@acronym{ASCII} characters such as @code{C-=} or @code{H-a},
1710 you must use a vector to specify the key sequence. Each element in
1711 the vector stands for an input event; the elements are separated by
1712 spaces and surrounded by a pair of square brackets. If an element is
1713 a symbol, simply write the symbol's name---no other delimiters or
1714 punctuation are needed. If a vector element is a character, write it
1715 as a Lisp character constant: @samp{?} followed by the character as it
1716 would appear in a string. Here are some examples:
1717
1718 @example
1719 (global-set-key [?\C-=] 'make-symbolic-link)
1720 (global-set-key [?\M-\C-=] 'make-symbolic-link)
1721 (global-set-key [?\H-a] 'make-symbolic-link)
1722 (global-set-key [f7] 'make-symbolic-link)
1723 (global-set-key [C-mouse-1] 'make-symbolic-link)
1724 @end example
1725
1726 @noindent
1727 You can use a vector for the simple cases too:
1728
1729 @example
1730 (global-set-key [?\C-z ?\M-l] 'make-symbolic-link)
1731 @end example
1732
1733 Language and coding systems may cause problems with key bindings for
1734 non-@acronym{ASCII} characters. @xref{Init Non-ASCII}.
1735
1736 @node Modifier Keys
1737 @subsection Modifier Keys
1738 @cindex modifier keys
1739
1740 The default key bindings in Emacs are set up so that modified
1741 alphabetical characters are case-insensitive. In other words,
1742 @kbd{C-A} does the same thing as @kbd{C-a}, and @kbd{M-A} does the
1743 same thing as @kbd{M-a}. This concerns only alphabetical characters,
1744 and does not apply to ``shifted'' versions of other keys; for
1745 instance, @kbd{C-@@} is not the same as @kbd{C-2}.
1746
1747 When you customize Emacs, you can make modified alphabetical
1748 characters case-sensitive. For instance, you could make @kbd{M-a} and
1749 @kbd{M-A} run different commands.
1750
1751 As a special exception, a @key{Control}-modified alphabetical
1752 character is always case-insensitive, for historical reasons: Emacs
1753 always treats @kbd{C-A} as @kbd{C-a}, @kbd{C-B} as @kbd{C-b}, and so
1754 forth.
1755
1756 Although only the @key{Control} and @key{Meta} modifier keys are
1757 commonly used, Emacs supports three other modifier keys. These are
1758 called @key{Super}, @key{Hyper} and @key{Alt}. Few terminals provide
1759 ways to use these modifiers; the key labeled @key{Alt} on most
1760 keyboards usually issues the @key{Meta} modifier, not @key{Alt}. The
1761 standard key bindings in Emacs do not include any characters with
1762 these modifiers. However, you can customize Emacs to assign meanings
1763 to them. The modifier bits are labelled as @samp{s-}, @samp{H-} and
1764 @samp{A-} respectively.
1765
1766 Even if your keyboard lacks these additional modifier keys, you can
1767 enter it using @kbd{C-x @@}: @kbd{C-x @@ h} adds the ``hyper'' flag to
1768 the next character, @kbd{C-x @@ s} adds the ``super'' flag, and
1769 @kbd{C-x @@ a} adds the ``alt'' flag. For instance, @kbd{C-x @@ h
1770 C-a} is a way to enter @kbd{Hyper-Control-a}. (Unfortunately, there
1771 is no way to add two modifiers by using @kbd{C-x @@} twice for the
1772 same character, because the first one goes to work on the @kbd{C-x}.)
1773
1774 @node Function Keys
1775 @subsection Rebinding Function Keys
1776
1777 Key sequences can contain function keys as well as ordinary
1778 characters. Just as Lisp characters (actually integers) represent
1779 keyboard characters, Lisp symbols represent function keys. If the
1780 function key has a word as its label, then that word is also the name of
1781 the corresponding Lisp symbol. Here are the conventional Lisp names for
1782 common function keys:
1783
1784 @table @asis
1785 @item @code{left}, @code{up}, @code{right}, @code{down}
1786 Cursor arrow keys.
1787
1788 @item @code{begin}, @code{end}, @code{home}, @code{next}, @code{prior}
1789 Other cursor repositioning keys.
1790
1791 @item @code{select}, @code{print}, @code{execute}, @code{backtab}
1792 @itemx @code{insert}, @code{undo}, @code{redo}, @code{clearline}
1793 @itemx @code{insertline}, @code{deleteline}, @code{insertchar}, @code{deletechar}
1794 Miscellaneous function keys.
1795
1796 @item @code{f1}, @code{f2}, @dots{} @code{f35}
1797 Numbered function keys (across the top of the keyboard).
1798
1799 @item @code{kp-add}, @code{kp-subtract}, @code{kp-multiply}, @code{kp-divide}
1800 @itemx @code{kp-backtab}, @code{kp-space}, @code{kp-tab}, @code{kp-enter}
1801 @itemx @code{kp-separator}, @code{kp-decimal}, @code{kp-equal}
1802 Keypad keys (to the right of the regular keyboard), with names or punctuation.
1803
1804 @item @code{kp-0}, @code{kp-1}, @dots{} @code{kp-9}
1805 Keypad keys with digits.
1806
1807 @item @code{kp-f1}, @code{kp-f2}, @code{kp-f3}, @code{kp-f4}
1808 Keypad PF keys.
1809 @end table
1810
1811 These names are conventional, but some systems (especially when using
1812 X) may use different names. To make certain what symbol is used for a
1813 given function key on your terminal, type @kbd{C-h c} followed by that
1814 key.
1815
1816 @xref{Init Rebinding}, for examples of binding function keys.
1817
1818 @cindex keypad
1819 Many keyboards have a ``numeric keypad'' on the right hand side.
1820 The numeric keys in the keypad double up as cursor motion keys,
1821 toggled by a key labeled @samp{Num Lock}. By default, Emacs
1822 translates these keys to the corresponding keys in the main keyboard.
1823 For example, when @samp{Num Lock} is on, the key labeled @samp{8} on
1824 the numeric keypad produces @code{kp-8}, which is translated to
1825 @kbd{8}; when @samp{Num Lock} is off, the same key produces
1826 @code{kp-up}, which is translated to @key{UP}. If you rebind a key
1827 such as @kbd{8} or @key{UP}, it affects the equivalent keypad key too.
1828 However, if you rebind a @samp{kp-} key directly, that won't affect
1829 its non-keypad equivalent. Note that the modified keys are not
1830 translated: for instance, if you hold down the @key{META} key while
1831 pressing the @samp{8} key on the numeric keypad, that generates
1832 @kbd{M-@key{kp-8}}.
1833
1834 Emacs provides a convenient method for binding the numeric keypad
1835 keys, using the variables @code{keypad-setup},
1836 @code{keypad-numlock-setup}, @code{keypad-shifted-setup}, and
1837 @code{keypad-numlock-shifted-setup}. These can be found in the
1838 @samp{keyboard} customization group (@pxref{Easy Customization}). You
1839 can rebind the keys to perform other tasks, such as issuing numeric
1840 prefix arguments.
1841
1842 @node Named ASCII Chars
1843 @subsection Named @acronym{ASCII} Control Characters
1844
1845 @key{TAB}, @key{RET}, @key{BS}, @key{LFD}, @key{ESC} and @key{DEL}
1846 started out as names for certain @acronym{ASCII} control characters,
1847 used so often that they have special keys of their own. For instance,
1848 @key{TAB} was another name for @kbd{C-i}. Later, users found it
1849 convenient to distinguish in Emacs between these keys and the ``same''
1850 control characters typed with the @key{CTRL} key. Therefore, on most
1851 modern terminals, they are no longer the same: @key{TAB} is different
1852 from @kbd{C-i}.
1853
1854 Emacs can distinguish these two kinds of input if the keyboard does.
1855 It treats the ``special'' keys as function keys named @code{tab},
1856 @code{return}, @code{backspace}, @code{linefeed}, @code{escape}, and
1857 @code{delete}. These function keys translate automatically into the
1858 corresponding @acronym{ASCII} characters @emph{if} they have no
1859 bindings of their own. As a result, neither users nor Lisp programs
1860 need to pay attention to the distinction unless they care to.
1861
1862 If you do not want to distinguish between (for example) @key{TAB} and
1863 @kbd{C-i}, make just one binding, for the @acronym{ASCII} character @key{TAB}
1864 (octal code 011). If you do want to distinguish, make one binding for
1865 this @acronym{ASCII} character, and another for the ``function key'' @code{tab}.
1866
1867 With an ordinary @acronym{ASCII} terminal, there is no way to distinguish
1868 between @key{TAB} and @kbd{C-i} (and likewise for other such pairs),
1869 because the terminal sends the same character in both cases.
1870
1871 @node Mouse Buttons
1872 @subsection Rebinding Mouse Buttons
1873 @cindex mouse button events
1874 @cindex rebinding mouse buttons
1875 @cindex click events
1876 @cindex drag events
1877 @cindex down events
1878 @cindex button down events
1879
1880 Emacs uses Lisp symbols to designate mouse buttons, too. The ordinary
1881 mouse events in Emacs are @dfn{click} events; these happen when you
1882 press a button and release it without moving the mouse. You can also
1883 get @dfn{drag} events, when you move the mouse while holding the button
1884 down. Drag events happen when you finally let go of the button.
1885
1886 The symbols for basic click events are @code{mouse-1} for the leftmost
1887 button, @code{mouse-2} for the next, and so on. Here is how you can
1888 redefine the second mouse button to split the current window:
1889
1890 @example
1891 (global-set-key [mouse-2] 'split-window-vertically)
1892 @end example
1893
1894 The symbols for drag events are similar, but have the prefix
1895 @samp{drag-} before the word @samp{mouse}. For example, dragging the
1896 first button generates a @code{drag-mouse-1} event.
1897
1898 You can also define bindings for events that occur when a mouse button
1899 is pressed down. These events start with @samp{down-} instead of
1900 @samp{drag-}. Such events are generated only if they have key bindings.
1901 When you get a button-down event, a corresponding click or drag event
1902 will always follow.
1903
1904 @cindex double clicks
1905 @cindex triple clicks
1906 If you wish, you can distinguish single, double, and triple clicks. A
1907 double click means clicking a mouse button twice in approximately the
1908 same place. The first click generates an ordinary click event. The
1909 second click, if it comes soon enough, generates a double-click event
1910 instead. The event type for a double-click event starts with
1911 @samp{double-}: for example, @code{double-mouse-3}.
1912
1913 This means that you can give a special meaning to the second click at
1914 the same place, but it must act on the assumption that the ordinary
1915 single click definition has run when the first click was received.
1916
1917 This constrains what you can do with double clicks, but user interface
1918 designers say that this constraint ought to be followed in any case. A
1919 double click should do something similar to the single click, only
1920 ``more so.'' The command for the double-click event should perform the
1921 extra work for the double click.
1922
1923 If a double-click event has no binding, it changes to the
1924 corresponding single-click event. Thus, if you don't define a
1925 particular double click specially, it executes the single-click command
1926 twice.
1927
1928 Emacs also supports triple-click events whose names start with
1929 @samp{triple-}. Emacs does not distinguish quadruple clicks as event
1930 types; clicks beyond the third generate additional triple-click events.
1931 However, the full number of clicks is recorded in the event list, so
1932 if you know Emacs Lisp you can distinguish if you really want to
1933 (@pxref{Click Events,,, elisp, The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}).
1934 We don't recommend distinct meanings for more than three clicks, but
1935 sometimes it is useful for subsequent clicks to cycle through the same
1936 set of three meanings, so that four clicks are equivalent to one
1937 click, five are equivalent to two, and six are equivalent to three.
1938
1939 Emacs also records multiple presses in drag and button-down events.
1940 For example, when you press a button twice, then move the mouse while
1941 holding the button, Emacs gets a @samp{double-drag-} event. And at the
1942 moment when you press it down for the second time, Emacs gets a
1943 @samp{double-down-} event (which is ignored, like all button-down
1944 events, if it has no binding).
1945
1946 @vindex double-click-time
1947 The variable @code{double-click-time} specifies how much time can
1948 elapse between clicks and still allow them to be grouped as a multiple
1949 click. Its value is in units of milliseconds. If the value is
1950 @code{nil}, double clicks are not detected at all. If the value is
1951 @code{t}, then there is no time limit. The default is 500.
1952
1953 @vindex double-click-fuzz
1954 The variable @code{double-click-fuzz} specifies how much the mouse
1955 can move between clicks and still allow them to be grouped as a multiple
1956 click. Its value is in units of pixels on windowed displays and in
1957 units of 1/8 of a character cell on text-mode terminals; the default is
1958 3.
1959
1960 The symbols for mouse events also indicate the status of the modifier
1961 keys, with the usual prefixes @samp{C-}, @samp{M-}, @samp{H-},
1962 @samp{s-}, @samp{A-} and @samp{S-}. These always precede @samp{double-}
1963 or @samp{triple-}, which always precede @samp{drag-} or @samp{down-}.
1964
1965 A frame includes areas that don't show text from the buffer, such as
1966 the mode line and the scroll bar. You can tell whether a mouse button
1967 comes from a special area of the screen by means of dummy ``prefix
1968 keys.'' For example, if you click the mouse in the mode line, you get
1969 the prefix key @code{mode-line} before the ordinary mouse-button symbol.
1970 Thus, here is how to define the command for clicking the first button in
1971 a mode line to run @code{scroll-up}:
1972
1973 @example
1974 (global-set-key [mode-line mouse-1] 'scroll-up)
1975 @end example
1976
1977 Here is the complete list of these dummy prefix keys and their
1978 meanings:
1979
1980 @table @code
1981 @item mode-line
1982 The mouse was in the mode line of a window.
1983 @item vertical-line
1984 The mouse was in the vertical line separating side-by-side windows. (If
1985 you use scroll bars, they appear in place of these vertical lines.)
1986 @item vertical-scroll-bar
1987 The mouse was in a vertical scroll bar. (This is the only kind of
1988 scroll bar Emacs currently supports.)
1989 @item menu-bar
1990 The mouse was in the menu bar.
1991 @item header-line
1992 The mouse was in a header line.
1993 @ignore
1994 @item horizontal-scroll-bar
1995 The mouse was in a horizontal scroll bar. Horizontal scroll bars do
1996 horizontal scrolling, and people don't use them often.
1997 @end ignore
1998 @end table
1999
2000 You can put more than one mouse button in a key sequence, but it isn't
2001 usual to do so.
2002
2003 @node Disabling
2004 @subsection Disabling Commands
2005 @cindex disabled command
2006
2007 Disabling a command means that invoking it interactively asks for
2008 confirmation from the user. The purpose of disabling a command is to
2009 prevent users from executing it by accident; we do this for commands
2010 that might be confusing to the uninitiated.
2011
2012 Attempting to invoke a disabled command interactively in Emacs
2013 displays a window containing the command's name, its documentation,
2014 and some instructions on what to do immediately; then Emacs asks for
2015 input saying whether to execute the command as requested, enable it
2016 and execute it, or cancel. If you decide to enable the command, you
2017 must then answer another question---whether to do this permanently, or
2018 just for the current session. (Enabling permanently works by
2019 automatically editing your @file{.emacs} file.) You can also type
2020 @kbd{!} to enable @emph{all} commands, for the current session only.
2021
2022 The direct mechanism for disabling a command is to put a
2023 non-@code{nil} @code{disabled} property on the Lisp symbol for the
2024 command. Here is the Lisp program to do this:
2025
2026 @example
2027 (put 'delete-region 'disabled t)
2028 @end example
2029
2030 If the value of the @code{disabled} property is a string, that string
2031 is included in the message displayed when the command is used:
2032
2033 @example
2034 (put 'delete-region 'disabled
2035 "It's better to use `kill-region' instead.\n")
2036 @end example
2037
2038 @findex disable-command
2039 @findex enable-command
2040 You can make a command disabled either by editing the @file{.emacs}
2041 file directly, or with the command @kbd{M-x disable-command}, which edits
2042 the @file{.emacs} file for you. Likewise, @kbd{M-x enable-command}
2043 edits @file{.emacs} to enable a command permanently. @xref{Init File}.
2044
2045 If Emacs was invoked with the @option{-q} or @option{--no-init-file}
2046 options (@pxref{Initial Options}), it will not edit your
2047 @file{~/.emacs} init file. Doing so could lose information
2048 because Emacs has not read your init file.
2049
2050 Whether a command is disabled is independent of what key is used to
2051 invoke it; disabling also applies if the command is invoked using
2052 @kbd{M-x}. However, disabling a command has no effect on calling it
2053 as a function from Lisp programs.
2054
2055 @node Syntax
2056 @section The Syntax Table
2057 @cindex syntax table
2058
2059 All the Emacs commands which parse words or balance parentheses are
2060 controlled by the @dfn{syntax table}. The syntax table says which
2061 characters are opening delimiters, which are parts of words, which are
2062 string quotes, and so on. It does this by assigning each character to
2063 one of fifteen-odd @dfn{syntax classes}. In some cases it specifies
2064 some additional information also.
2065
2066 Each major mode has its own syntax table (though related major modes
2067 sometimes share one syntax table), which it installs in each buffer
2068 that uses the mode. The syntax table installed in the current buffer
2069 is the one that all commands use, so we call it ``the'' syntax table.
2070
2071 @kindex C-h s
2072 @findex describe-syntax
2073 To display a description of the contents of the current syntax
2074 table, type @kbd{C-h s} (@code{describe-syntax}). The description of
2075 each character includes the string you would have to give to
2076 @code{modify-syntax-entry} to set up that character's current syntax,
2077 starting with the character which designates its syntax class, plus
2078 some English text to explain its meaning.
2079
2080 A syntax table is actually a Lisp object, a char-table, whose
2081 elements are cons cells. For full information on the syntax table,
2082 see @ref{Syntax Tables,, Syntax Tables, elisp, The Emacs Lisp
2083 Reference Manual}.
2084
2085 @node Init File
2086 @section The Init File, @file{~/.emacs}
2087 @cindex init file
2088 @cindex Emacs initialization file
2089 @cindex key rebinding, permanent
2090 @cindex rebinding keys, permanently
2091 @cindex startup (init file)
2092
2093 When Emacs is started, it normally tries to load a Lisp program from
2094 an @dfn{initialization file}, or @dfn{init file} for short. This
2095 file, if it exists, specifies how to initialize Emacs for you. Emacs
2096 looks for your init file using the filenames @file{~/.emacs},
2097 @file{~/.emacs.el}, or @file{~/.emacs.d/init.el}; you can choose to
2098 use any one of these three names (@pxref{Find Init}). Here, @file{~/}
2099 stands for your home directory.
2100
2101 You can use the command line switch @samp{-q} to prevent loading
2102 your init file, and @samp{-u} (or @samp{--user}) to specify a
2103 different user's init file (@pxref{Initial Options}).
2104
2105 @cindex @file{default.el}, the default init file
2106 There can also be a @dfn{default init file}, which is the library
2107 named @file{default.el}, found via the standard search path for
2108 libraries. The Emacs distribution contains no such library; your site
2109 may create one for local customizations. If this library exists, it is
2110 loaded whenever you start Emacs (except when you specify @samp{-q}).
2111 But your init file, if any, is loaded first; if it sets
2112 @code{inhibit-default-init} non-@code{nil}, then @file{default} is not
2113 loaded.
2114
2115 @cindex site init file
2116 @cindex @file{site-start.el}, the site startup file
2117 Your site may also have a @dfn{site startup file}; this is named
2118 @file{site-start.el}, if it exists. Like @file{default.el}, Emacs
2119 finds this file via the standard search path for Lisp libraries.
2120 Emacs loads this library before it loads your init file. To inhibit
2121 loading of this library, use the option @samp{--no-site-file}.
2122 @xref{Initial Options}. We recommend against using
2123 @file{site-start.el} for changes that some users may not like. It is
2124 better to put them in @file{default.el}, so that users can more easily
2125 override them.
2126
2127 You can place @file{default.el} and @file{site-start.el} in any of
2128 the directories which Emacs searches for Lisp libraries. The variable
2129 @code{load-path} (@pxref{Lisp Libraries}) specifies these directories.
2130 Many sites put these files in the @file{site-lisp} subdirectory of the
2131 Emacs installation directory, typically
2132 @file{/usr/local/share/emacs/site-lisp}.
2133
2134 Byte-compiling your init file is not recommended (@pxref{Byte
2135 Compilation,, Byte Compilation, elisp, the Emacs Lisp Reference
2136 Manual}). It generally does not speed up startup very much, and often
2137 leads to problems when you forget to recompile the file. A better
2138 solution is to use the Emacs server to reduce the number of times you
2139 have to start Emacs (@pxref{Emacs Server}). If your init file defines
2140 many functions, consider moving them to a separate (byte-compiled)
2141 file that you load in your init file.
2142
2143 If you are going to write actual Emacs Lisp programs that go beyond
2144 minor customization, you should read the @cite{Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.
2145 @ifnottex
2146 @xref{Top, Emacs Lisp, Emacs Lisp, elisp, the Emacs Lisp Reference
2147 Manual}.
2148 @end ifnottex
2149
2150 @menu
2151 * Init Syntax:: Syntax of constants in Emacs Lisp.
2152 * Init Examples:: How to do some things with an init file.
2153 * Terminal Init:: Each terminal type can have an init file.
2154 * Find Init:: How Emacs finds the init file.
2155 * Init Non-ASCII:: Using non-@acronym{ASCII} characters in an init file.
2156 @end menu
2157
2158 @node Init Syntax
2159 @subsection Init File Syntax
2160
2161 The init file contains one or more Lisp expressions. Each of these
2162 consists of a function name followed by arguments, all surrounded by
2163 parentheses. For example, @code{(setq fill-column 60)} calls the
2164 function @code{setq} to set the variable @code{fill-column}
2165 (@pxref{Filling}) to 60.
2166
2167 You can set any Lisp variable with @code{setq}, but with certain
2168 variables @code{setq} won't do what you probably want in the
2169 @file{.emacs} file. Some variables automatically become buffer-local
2170 when set with @code{setq}; what you want in @file{.emacs} is to set
2171 the default value, using @code{setq-default}. Some customizable minor
2172 mode variables do special things to enable the mode when you set them
2173 with Customize, but ordinary @code{setq} won't do that; to enable the
2174 mode in your @file{.emacs} file, call the minor mode command. The
2175 following section has examples of both of these methods.
2176
2177 The second argument to @code{setq} is an expression for the new
2178 value of the variable. This can be a constant, a variable, or a
2179 function call expression. In @file{.emacs}, constants are used most
2180 of the time. They can be:
2181
2182 @table @asis
2183 @item Numbers:
2184 Numbers are written in decimal, with an optional initial minus sign.
2185
2186 @item Strings:
2187 @cindex Lisp string syntax
2188 @cindex string syntax
2189 Lisp string syntax is the same as C string syntax with a few extra
2190 features. Use a double-quote character to begin and end a string constant.
2191
2192 In a string, you can include newlines and special characters literally.
2193 But often it is cleaner to use backslash sequences for them: @samp{\n}
2194 for newline, @samp{\b} for backspace, @samp{\r} for carriage return,
2195 @samp{\t} for tab, @samp{\f} for formfeed (control-L), @samp{\e} for
2196 escape, @samp{\\} for a backslash, @samp{\"} for a double-quote, or
2197 @samp{\@var{ooo}} for the character whose octal code is @var{ooo}.
2198 Backslash and double-quote are the only characters for which backslash
2199 sequences are mandatory.
2200
2201 @samp{\C-} can be used as a prefix for a control character, as in
2202 @samp{\C-s} for @acronym{ASCII} control-S, and @samp{\M-} can be used as a prefix for
2203 a Meta character, as in @samp{\M-a} for @kbd{Meta-A} or @samp{\M-\C-a} for
2204 @kbd{Control-Meta-A}.@refill
2205
2206 @xref{Init Non-ASCII}, for information about including
2207 non-@acronym{ASCII} in your init file.
2208
2209 @item Characters:
2210 Lisp character constant syntax consists of a @samp{?} followed by
2211 either a character or an escape sequence starting with @samp{\}.
2212 Examples: @code{?x}, @code{?\n}, @code{?\"}, @code{?\)}. Note that
2213 strings and characters are not interchangeable in Lisp; some contexts
2214 require one and some contexts require the other.
2215
2216 @xref{Init Non-ASCII}, for information about binding commands to
2217 keys which send non-@acronym{ASCII} characters.
2218
2219 @item True:
2220 @code{t} stands for `true'.
2221
2222 @item False:
2223 @code{nil} stands for `false'.
2224
2225 @item Other Lisp objects:
2226 Write a single-quote (@code{'}) followed by the Lisp object you want.
2227 @end table
2228
2229 @node Init Examples
2230 @subsection Init File Examples
2231
2232 Here are some examples of doing certain commonly desired things with
2233 Lisp expressions:
2234
2235 @itemize @bullet
2236 @item
2237 Make @key{TAB} in C mode just insert a tab if point is in the middle of a
2238 line.
2239
2240 @example
2241 (setq c-tab-always-indent nil)
2242 @end example
2243
2244 Here we have a variable whose value is normally @code{t} for `true'
2245 and the alternative is @code{nil} for `false'.
2246
2247 @item
2248 Make searches case sensitive by default (in all buffers that do not
2249 override this).
2250
2251 @example
2252 (setq-default case-fold-search nil)
2253 @end example
2254
2255 This sets the default value, which is effective in all buffers that do
2256 not have local values for the variable. Setting @code{case-fold-search}
2257 with @code{setq} affects only the current buffer's local value, which
2258 is not what you probably want to do in an init file.
2259
2260 @item
2261 @vindex user-mail-address
2262 Specify your own email address, if Emacs can't figure it out correctly.
2263
2264 @example
2265 (setq user-mail-address "rumsfeld@@torture.gov")
2266 @end example
2267
2268 Various Emacs packages that need your own email address use the value of
2269 @code{user-mail-address}.
2270
2271 @item
2272 Make Text mode the default mode for new buffers.
2273
2274 @example
2275 (setq default-major-mode 'text-mode)
2276 @end example
2277
2278 Note that @code{text-mode} is used because it is the command for
2279 entering Text mode. The single-quote before it makes the symbol a
2280 constant; otherwise, @code{text-mode} would be treated as a variable
2281 name.
2282
2283 @need 1500
2284 @item
2285 Set up defaults for the Latin-1 character set
2286 which supports most of the languages of Western Europe.
2287
2288 @example
2289 (set-language-environment "Latin-1")
2290 @end example
2291
2292 @need 1500
2293 @item
2294 Turn off Line Number mode, a global minor mode.
2295
2296 @example
2297 (line-number-mode 0)
2298 @end example
2299
2300 @need 1500
2301 @item
2302 Turn on Auto Fill mode automatically in Text mode and related modes.
2303
2304 @example
2305 (add-hook 'text-mode-hook
2306 '(lambda () (auto-fill-mode 1)))
2307 @end example
2308
2309 This shows how to add a hook function to a normal hook variable
2310 (@pxref{Hooks}). The function we supply is a list starting with
2311 @code{lambda}, with a single-quote in front of it to make it a list
2312 constant rather than an expression.
2313
2314 It's beyond the scope of this manual to explain Lisp functions, but for
2315 this example it is enough to know that the effect is to execute
2316 @code{(auto-fill-mode 1)} when Text mode is entered. You can replace
2317 that with any other expression that you like, or with several
2318 expressions in a row.
2319
2320 Emacs comes with a function named @code{turn-on-auto-fill} whose
2321 definition is @code{(lambda () (auto-fill-mode 1))}. Thus, a simpler
2322 way to write the above example is as follows:
2323
2324 @example
2325 (add-hook 'text-mode-hook 'turn-on-auto-fill)
2326 @end example
2327
2328 @item
2329 Load the installed Lisp library named @file{foo} (actually a file
2330 @file{foo.elc} or @file{foo.el} in a standard Emacs directory).
2331
2332 @example
2333 (load "foo")
2334 @end example
2335
2336 When the argument to @code{load} is a relative file name, not starting
2337 with @samp{/} or @samp{~}, @code{load} searches the directories in
2338 @code{load-path} (@pxref{Lisp Libraries}).
2339
2340 @item
2341 Load the compiled Lisp file @file{foo.elc} from your home directory.
2342
2343 @example
2344 (load "~/foo.elc")
2345 @end example
2346
2347 Here an absolute file name is used, so no searching is done.
2348
2349 @item
2350 @cindex loading Lisp libraries automatically
2351 @cindex autoload Lisp libraries
2352 Tell Emacs to find the definition for the function @code{myfunction}
2353 by loading a Lisp library named @file{mypackage} (i.e.@: a file
2354 @file{mypackage.elc} or @file{mypackage.el}):
2355
2356 @example
2357 (autoload 'myfunction "mypackage" "Do what I say." t)
2358 @end example
2359
2360 @noindent
2361 Here the string @code{"Do what I say."} is the function's
2362 documentation string. You specify it in the @code{autoload}
2363 definition so it will be available for help commands even when the
2364 package is not loaded. The last argument, @code{t}, indicates that
2365 this function is interactive; that is, it can be invoked interactively
2366 by typing @kbd{M-x myfunction @key{RET}} or by binding it to a key.
2367 If the function is not interactive, omit the @code{t} or use
2368 @code{nil}.
2369
2370 @item
2371 Rebind the key @kbd{C-x l} to run the function @code{make-symbolic-link}
2372 (@pxref{Init Rebinding}).
2373
2374 @example
2375 (global-set-key "\C-xl" 'make-symbolic-link)
2376 @end example
2377
2378 or
2379
2380 @example
2381 (define-key global-map "\C-xl" 'make-symbolic-link)
2382 @end example
2383
2384 Note once again the single-quote used to refer to the symbol
2385 @code{make-symbolic-link} instead of its value as a variable.
2386
2387 @item
2388 Do the same thing for Lisp mode only.
2389
2390 @example
2391 (define-key lisp-mode-map "\C-xl" 'make-symbolic-link)
2392 @end example
2393
2394 @item
2395 Redefine all keys which now run @code{next-line} in Fundamental mode
2396 so that they run @code{forward-line} instead.
2397
2398 @findex substitute-key-definition
2399 @example
2400 (substitute-key-definition 'next-line 'forward-line
2401 global-map)
2402 @end example
2403
2404 @item
2405 Make @kbd{C-x C-v} undefined.
2406
2407 @example
2408 (global-unset-key "\C-x\C-v")
2409 @end example
2410
2411 One reason to undefine a key is so that you can make it a prefix.
2412 Simply defining @kbd{C-x C-v @var{anything}} will make @kbd{C-x C-v} a
2413 prefix, but @kbd{C-x C-v} must first be freed of its usual non-prefix
2414 definition.
2415
2416 @item
2417 Make @samp{$} have the syntax of punctuation in Text mode.
2418 Note the use of a character constant for @samp{$}.
2419
2420 @example
2421 (modify-syntax-entry ?\$ "." text-mode-syntax-table)
2422 @end example
2423
2424 @item
2425 Enable the use of the command @code{narrow-to-region} without confirmation.
2426
2427 @example
2428 (put 'narrow-to-region 'disabled nil)
2429 @end example
2430
2431 @item
2432 Adjusting the configuration to various platforms and Emacs versions.
2433
2434 Users typically want Emacs to behave the same on all systems, so the
2435 same init file is right for all platforms. However, sometimes it
2436 happens that a function you use for customizing Emacs is not available
2437 on some platforms or in older Emacs versions. To deal with that
2438 situation, put the customization inside a conditional that tests whether
2439 the function or facility is available, like this:
2440
2441 @example
2442 (if (fboundp 'blink-cursor-mode)
2443 (blink-cursor-mode 0))
2444
2445 (if (boundp 'coding-category-utf-8)
2446 (set-coding-priority '(coding-category-utf-8)))
2447 @end example
2448
2449 @noindent
2450 You can also simply disregard the errors that occur if the
2451 function is not defined.
2452
2453 @example
2454 (condition case ()
2455 (set-face-background 'region "grey75")
2456 (error nil))
2457 @end example
2458
2459 A @code{setq} on a variable which does not exist is generally
2460 harmless, so those do not need a conditional.
2461 @end itemize
2462
2463 @node Terminal Init
2464 @subsection Terminal-specific Initialization
2465
2466 Each terminal type can have a Lisp library to be loaded into Emacs when
2467 it is run on that type of terminal. For a terminal type named
2468 @var{termtype}, the library is called @file{term/@var{termtype}} and it is
2469 found by searching the directories @code{load-path} as usual and trying the
2470 suffixes @samp{.elc} and @samp{.el}. Normally it appears in the
2471 subdirectory @file{term} of the directory where most Emacs libraries are
2472 kept.@refill
2473
2474 The usual purpose of the terminal-specific library is to map the
2475 escape sequences used by the terminal's function keys onto more
2476 meaningful names, using @code{input-decode-map} (or
2477 @code{function-key-map} before it). See the file
2478 @file{term/lk201.el} for an example of how this is done. Many function
2479 keys are mapped automatically according to the information in the
2480 Termcap data base; the terminal-specific library needs to map only the
2481 function keys that Termcap does not specify.
2482
2483 When the terminal type contains a hyphen, only the part of the name
2484 before the first hyphen is significant in choosing the library name.
2485 Thus, terminal types @samp{aaa-48} and @samp{aaa-30-rv} both use
2486 the library @file{term/aaa}. The code in the library can use
2487 @code{(getenv "TERM")} to find the full terminal type name.@refill
2488
2489 @vindex term-file-prefix
2490 The library's name is constructed by concatenating the value of the
2491 variable @code{term-file-prefix} and the terminal type. Your @file{.emacs}
2492 file can prevent the loading of the terminal-specific library by setting
2493 @code{term-file-prefix} to @code{nil}.
2494
2495 @vindex term-setup-hook
2496 Emacs runs the hook @code{term-setup-hook} at the end of
2497 initialization, after both your @file{.emacs} file and any
2498 terminal-specific library have been read in. Add hook functions to this
2499 hook if you wish to override part of any of the terminal-specific
2500 libraries and to define initializations for terminals that do not have a
2501 library. @xref{Hooks}.
2502
2503 @node Find Init
2504 @subsection How Emacs Finds Your Init File
2505
2506 Normally Emacs uses the environment variable @env{HOME}
2507 (@pxref{General Variables, HOME}) to find @file{.emacs}; that's what
2508 @samp{~} means in a file name. If @file{.emacs} is not found inside
2509 @file{~/} (nor @file{.emacs.el}), Emacs looks for
2510 @file{~/.emacs.d/init.el} (which, like @file{~/.emacs.el}, can be
2511 byte-compiled).
2512
2513 However, if you run Emacs from a shell started by @code{su}, Emacs
2514 tries to find your own @file{.emacs}, not that of the user you are
2515 currently pretending to be. The idea is that you should get your own
2516 editor customizations even if you are running as the super user.
2517
2518 More precisely, Emacs first determines which user's init file to use.
2519 It gets your user name from the environment variables @env{LOGNAME} and
2520 @env{USER}; if neither of those exists, it uses effective user-ID.
2521 If that user name matches the real user-ID, then Emacs uses @env{HOME};
2522 otherwise, it looks up the home directory corresponding to that user
2523 name in the system's data base of users.
2524 @c LocalWords: backtab
2525
2526 @node Init Non-ASCII
2527 @subsection Non-@acronym{ASCII} Characters in Init Files
2528 @cindex international characters in @file{.emacs}
2529 @cindex non-@acronym{ASCII} characters in @file{.emacs}
2530 @cindex non-@acronym{ASCII} keys, binding
2531 @cindex rebinding non-@acronym{ASCII} keys
2532
2533 Language and coding systems may cause problems if your init file
2534 contains non-@acronym{ASCII} characters, such as accented letters, in
2535 strings or key bindings.
2536
2537 If you want to use non-@acronym{ASCII} characters in your init file,
2538 you should put a @w{@samp{-*-coding: @var{coding-system}-*-}} tag on
2539 the first line of the init file, and specify a coding system that
2540 supports the character(s) in question. @xref{Recognize Coding}. This
2541 is because the defaults for decoding non-@acronym{ASCII} text might
2542 not yet be set up by the time Emacs reads those parts of your init
2543 file which use such strings, possibly leading Emacs to decode those
2544 strings incorrectly. You should then avoid adding Emacs Lisp code
2545 that modifies the coding system in other ways, such as calls to
2546 @code{set-language-environment}.
2547
2548 To bind non-@acronym{ASCII} keys, you must use a vector (@pxref{Init
2549 Rebinding}). The string syntax cannot be used, since the
2550 non-@acronym{ASCII} characters will be interpreted as meta keys. For
2551 instance:
2552
2553 @example
2554 (global-set-key [?@var{char}] 'some-function)
2555 @end example
2556
2557 @noindent
2558 Type @kbd{C-q}, followed by the key you want to bind, to insert @var{char}.
2559
2560 @strong{Warning:} if you change the keyboard encoding, or change
2561 between multibyte and unibyte mode, or anything that would alter which
2562 code @kbd{C-q} would insert for that character, this key binding may
2563 stop working. It is therefore advisable to use one and only one
2564 coding system, for your init file as well as the files you edit. For
2565 example, don't mix the @samp{latin-1} and @samp{latin-9} coding
2566 systems.
2567
2568 @ignore
2569 arch-tag: c68abddb-4410-4fb5-925f-63394e971d93
2570 @end ignore