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1 @c This is part of the Emacs manual.
2 @c Copyright (C) 1985,86,87,93,94,95,97,99,2000 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
3 @c See file emacs.texi for copying conditions.
4 @node Programs, Building, Text, Top
5 @chapter Editing Programs
6 @cindex Lisp editing
7 @cindex C editing
8 @cindex program editing
9
10 Emacs has many commands designed to understand the syntax of programming
11 languages such as Lisp and C. These commands can
12
13 @itemize @bullet
14 @item
15 Move over or kill balanced expressions or @dfn{sexps} (@pxref{Lists}).
16 @item
17 Move over or mark top-level expressions---@dfn{defuns}, in Lisp;
18 functions, in C (@pxref{Defuns}).
19 @item
20 Show how parentheses balance (@pxref{Matching}).
21 @item
22 Insert, kill or align comments (@pxref{Comments}).
23 @item
24 Follow the usual indentation conventions of the language
25 (@pxref{Program Indent}).
26 @end itemize
27
28 The commands for words, sentences and paragraphs are very useful in
29 editing code even though their canonical application is for editing
30 human language text. Most symbols contain words (@pxref{Words});
31 sentences can be found in strings and comments (@pxref{Sentences}).
32 Paragraphs per se don't exist in code, but the paragraph commands are
33 useful anyway, because programming language major modes define
34 paragraphs to begin and end at blank lines (@pxref{Paragraphs}).
35 Judicious use of blank lines to make the program clearer will also
36 provide useful chunks of text for the paragraph commands to work
37 on.
38
39 The selective display feature is useful for looking at the overall
40 structure of a function (@pxref{Selective Display}). This feature
41 hides the lines that are indented more than a specified amount.
42 Programming modes often support Outline minor mode (@pxref{Outline
43 Mode}). The Foldout package provides folding-editor features
44 (@pxref{Foldout}).
45
46 The ``automatic typing'' features may be useful for writing programs.
47 @xref{Top,,Autotyping, autotype, Autotyping}.
48
49 @menu
50 * Program Modes:: Major modes for editing programs.
51 * Lists:: Expressions with balanced parentheses.
52 * List Commands:: The commands for working with list and sexps.
53 * Defuns:: Each program is made up of separate functions.
54 There are editing commands to operate on them.
55 * Program Indent:: Adjusting indentation to show the nesting.
56 * Matching:: Insertion of a close-delimiter flashes matching open.
57 * Comments:: Inserting, killing, and aligning comments.
58 * Balanced Editing:: Inserting two matching parentheses at once, etc.
59 * Symbol Completion:: Completion on symbol names of your program or language.
60 * Which Function:: Which Function mode shows which function you are in.
61 * Hideshow:: Displaying blocks selectively.
62 * Glasses:: Making identifiersLikeThis more readable.
63 * Documentation:: Getting documentation of functions you plan to call.
64 * Change Log:: Maintaining a change history for your program.
65 * Authors:: Maintaining an @file{AUTHORS} file.
66 * Tags:: Go direct to any function in your program in one
67 command. Tags remembers which file it is in.
68 * Imenu:: Making buffer indexes as menus.
69 * Emerge:: A convenient way of merging two versions of a program.
70 * C Modes:: Special commands of C, C++, Objective-C,
71 Java, and Pike modes.
72 * Fortran:: Fortran mode and its special features.
73 * Asm Mode:: Asm mode and its special features.
74 @end menu
75
76 @node Program Modes
77 @section Major Modes for Programming Languages
78
79 @cindex modes for programming languages
80 @cindex Perl mode
81 @cindex Icon mode
82 @cindex Awk mode
83 @cindex Makefile mode
84 @cindex Tcl mode
85 @cindex CPerl mode
86 @cindex DSSSL mode
87 @cindex Octave mode
88 @cindex Metafont mode
89 @cindex Modula2 mode
90 @cindex Prolog mode
91 @cindex Simula mode
92 @cindex VHDL mode
93 @cindex M4 mode
94 @cindex Shell-script mode
95 @cindex Delphi mode
96 @cindex PostScript mode
97 Emacs also has major modes for the programming languages Lisp, Scheme
98 (a variant of Lisp) and the Scheme-based DSSSL expression language, Ada,
99 Awk, C, C++, Delphi (Object Pascal), Fortran (free and fixed format),
100 Icon, IDLWAVE,
101 Java, Metafont (@TeX{}'s companion for font creation), Modula2,
102 Objective-C, Octave, Pascal, Perl, Pike, PostScript, Prolog, Simula,
103 VHDL, CORBA IDL, and Tcl.
104 There is also a major mode for makefiles, called Makefile
105 mode. An alternative mode for Perl is called CPerl mode. Modes
106 are available for scripts for the common Unix shells, VMS DCL and
107 MS-DOS/MS-Windows @samp{BAT} files. In a similar fashion to programming
108 languages, modes are provided for editing various sorts of configuration
109 files.
110
111 Separate manuals are available for the modes for Ada (@pxref{Top, , Ada
112 Mode, ada-mode, Ada Mode}), C/C++/Objective C/Java/Corba IDL
113 (@pxref{Top, , CC Mode, ccmode, CC Mode}) and the IDLWAVE modes
114 (@pxref{Top, , IDLWAVE, idlwave, IDLWAVE User Manual}).
115
116 Ideally, a major mode should be implemented for each programming
117 language that you might want to edit with Emacs; but often the mode for
118 one language can serve for other syntactically similar languages. The
119 language modes that exist are those that someone decided to take the
120 trouble to write.
121
122 There are several forms of Lisp mode, which differ in the way they
123 interface to Lisp execution. @xref{Executing Lisp}.
124
125 Each of the programming language major modes defines the @key{TAB} key
126 to run an indentation function that knows the indentation conventions of
127 that language and updates the current line's indentation accordingly.
128 For example, in C mode @key{TAB} is bound to @code{c-indent-command}.
129 @kbd{C-j} is normally defined to do @key{RET} followed by @key{TAB};
130 thus, it too indents in a mode-specific fashion.
131
132 @kindex DEL @r{(programming modes)}
133 @findex c-electric-backspace
134 In most programming languages, indentation is likely to vary from
135 line to line. So the major modes for those languages rebind @key{DEL}
136 to treat a tab as if it were the equivalent number of spaces (using
137 the command @code{c-electric-backspace}). This makes it possible to
138 rub out indentation one column at a time without worrying whether it
139 is made up of spaces or tabs. Use @kbd{C-b C-d} to delete a tab
140 character before point, in these modes.
141
142 Programming language modes define paragraphs to be separated only by
143 blank lines, so that the paragraph commands remain useful. Auto Fill mode,
144 if enabled in a programming language major mode, indents the new lines
145 which it creates.
146
147 @cindex mode hook
148 @vindex c-mode-hook
149 @vindex lisp-mode-hook
150 @vindex emacs-lisp-mode-hook
151 @vindex lisp-interaction-mode-hook
152 @vindex scheme-mode-hook
153 Turning on a major mode runs a normal hook called the @dfn{mode hook},
154 which is the value of a Lisp variable. Each major mode has a mode hook,
155 and the hook's name is always made from the mode command's name by
156 adding @samp{-hook}. For example, turning on C mode runs the hook
157 @code{c-mode-hook}, while turning on Lisp mode runs the hook
158 @code{lisp-mode-hook}. @xref{Hooks}.
159
160 @node Lists
161 @section Lists and Sexps
162
163 @cindex Control-Meta
164 By convention, Emacs keys for dealing with balanced expressions are
165 usually Control-Meta characters. They tend to be analogous in
166 function to their Control and Meta equivalents. These commands are
167 usually thought of as pertaining to expressions in programming
168 languages, but can be useful with any language in which some sort of
169 parentheses exist (including human languages).
170
171 @cindex list
172 @cindex sexp
173 @cindex expression
174 These commands fall into two classes. Some deal only with @dfn{lists}
175 (parenthetical groupings). They see nothing except parentheses, brackets,
176 braces (whichever ones must balance in the language you are working with),
177 and escape characters that might be used to quote those.
178
179 The other commands deal with expressions or @dfn{sexps}. The word ``sexp''
180 is derived from @dfn{s-expression}, the ancient term for an expression in
181 Lisp. But in Emacs, the notion of ``sexp'' is not limited to Lisp. It
182 refers to an expression in whatever language your program is written in.
183 Each programming language has its own major mode, which customizes the
184 syntax tables so that expressions in that language count as sexps.
185
186 Sexps typically include symbols, numbers, and string constants, as well
187 as anything contained in parentheses, brackets or braces.
188
189 In languages that use prefix and infix operators, such as C, it is not
190 possible for all expressions to be sexps. For example, C mode does not
191 recognize @samp{foo + bar} as a sexp, even though it @emph{is} a C expression;
192 it recognizes @samp{foo} as one sexp and @samp{bar} as another, with the
193 @samp{+} as punctuation between them. This is a fundamental ambiguity:
194 both @samp{foo + bar} and @samp{foo} are legitimate choices for the sexp to
195 move over if point is at the @samp{f}. Note that @samp{(foo + bar)} is a
196 single sexp in C mode.
197
198 Some languages have obscure forms of expression syntax that nobody
199 has bothered to make Emacs understand properly.
200
201 @node List Commands
202 @section List And Sexp Commands
203
204 @c doublewidecommands
205 @table @kbd
206 @item C-M-f
207 Move forward over a sexp (@code{forward-sexp}).
208 @item C-M-b
209 Move backward over a sexp (@code{backward-sexp}).
210 @item C-M-k
211 Kill sexp forward (@code{kill-sexp}).
212 @item C-M-@key{DEL}
213 Kill sexp backward (@code{backward-kill-sexp}).
214 @item C-M-u
215 Move up and backward in list structure (@code{backward-up-list}).
216 @item C-M-d
217 Move down and forward in list structure (@code{down-list}).
218 @item C-M-n
219 Move forward over a list (@code{forward-list}).
220 @item C-M-p
221 Move backward over a list (@code{backward-list}).
222 @item C-M-t
223 Transpose expressions (@code{transpose-sexps}).
224 @item C-M-@@
225 Put mark after following expression (@code{mark-sexp}).
226 @end table
227
228 @cindex parentheses, moving across
229 @cindex matching parenthesis and braces, moving to
230 @cindex braces, moving across
231 @kindex C-M-f
232 @kindex C-M-b
233 @findex forward-sexp
234 @findex backward-sexp
235 To move forward over a sexp, use @kbd{C-M-f} (@code{forward-sexp}). If
236 the first significant character after point is an opening delimiter
237 (@samp{(} in Lisp; @samp{(}, @samp{[} or @samp{@{} in C), @kbd{C-M-f}
238 moves past the matching closing delimiter. If the character begins a
239 symbol, string, or number, @kbd{C-M-f} moves over that.
240
241 The command @kbd{C-M-b} (@code{backward-sexp}) moves backward over a
242 sexp. The detailed rules are like those above for @kbd{C-M-f}, but with
243 directions reversed. If there are any prefix characters (single-quote,
244 backquote and comma, in Lisp) preceding the sexp, @kbd{C-M-b} moves back
245 over them as well. The sexp commands move across comments as if they
246 were whitespace in most modes.
247
248 @kbd{C-M-f} or @kbd{C-M-b} with an argument repeats that operation the
249 specified number of times; with a negative argument, it moves in the
250 opposite direction.
251
252 @cindex deleting parenthesized expressions
253 @kindex C-M-k
254 @findex kill-sexp
255 @kindex C-M-DEL
256 @findex backward-kill-sexp
257 Killing a whole sexp can be done with @kbd{C-M-k} (@code{kill-sexp})
258 or @kbd{C-M-@key{DEL}} (@code{backward-kill-sexp}). @kbd{C-M-k} kills
259 the characters that @kbd{C-M-f} would move over, and @kbd{C-M-@key{DEL}}
260 kills the characters that @kbd{C-M-b} would move over.
261
262 @kindex C-M-n
263 @kindex C-M-p
264 @findex forward-list
265 @findex backward-list
266 The @dfn{list commands} move over lists, as the sexp commands do, but skip
267 blithely over any number of other kinds of sexps (symbols, strings, etc.).
268 They are @kbd{C-M-n} (@code{forward-list}) and @kbd{C-M-p}
269 (@code{backward-list}). The main reason they are useful is that they
270 usually ignore comments (since the comments usually do not contain any
271 lists).@refill
272
273 @kindex C-M-u
274 @kindex C-M-d
275 @findex backward-up-list
276 @findex down-list
277 @kbd{C-M-n} and @kbd{C-M-p} stay at the same level in parentheses, when
278 that's possible. To move @emph{up} one (or @var{n}) levels, use @kbd{C-M-u}
279 (@code{backward-up-list}).
280 @kbd{C-M-u} moves backward up past one unmatched opening delimiter. A
281 positive argument serves as a repeat count; a negative argument reverses
282 direction of motion and also requests repetition, so it moves forward and
283 up one or more levels.@refill
284
285 To move @emph{down} in list structure, use @kbd{C-M-d}
286 (@code{down-list}). In Lisp mode, where @samp{(} is the only opening
287 delimiter, this is nearly the same as searching for a @samp{(}. An
288 argument specifies the number of levels of parentheses to go down.
289
290 @cindex transposition of parenthesized expressions
291 @kindex C-M-t
292 @findex transpose-sexps
293 A somewhat random-sounding command which is nevertheless handy is
294 @kbd{C-M-t} (@code{transpose-sexps}), which drags the previous sexp
295 across the next one. An argument serves as a repeat count, and a
296 negative argument drags backwards (thus canceling out the effect of
297 @kbd{C-M-t} with a positive argument). An argument of zero, rather than
298 doing nothing, transposes the sexps ending after point and the mark.
299
300 @kindex C-M-@@
301 @findex mark-sexp
302 To set the region around the next sexp in the buffer, use @kbd{C-M-@@}
303 (@code{mark-sexp}), which sets mark at the same place that @kbd{C-M-f}
304 would move to. @kbd{C-M-@@} takes arguments like @kbd{C-M-f}. In
305 particular, a negative argument is useful for putting the mark at the
306 beginning of the previous sexp.
307
308 The list and sexp commands' understanding of syntax is completely
309 controlled by the syntax table. Any character can, for example, be
310 declared to be an opening delimiter and act like an open parenthesis.
311 @xref{Syntax}.
312
313 @node Defuns
314 @section Defuns
315 @cindex defuns
316
317 In Emacs, a parenthetical grouping at the top level in the buffer is
318 called a @dfn{defun}. The name derives from the fact that most top-level
319 lists in a Lisp file are instances of the special form @code{defun}, but
320 any top-level parenthetical grouping counts as a defun in Emacs parlance
321 regardless of what its contents are, and regardless of the programming
322 language in use. For example, in C, the body of a function definition is a
323 defun.
324
325 @c doublewidecommands
326 @table @kbd
327 @item C-M-a
328 Move to beginning of current or preceding defun
329 (@code{beginning-of-defun}).
330 @item C-M-e
331 Move to end of current or following defun (@code{end-of-defun}).
332 @item C-M-h
333 Put region around whole current or following defun (@code{mark-defun}).
334 @end table
335
336 @cindex move to beginning or end of function
337 @cindex function, move to beginning or end
338 @kindex C-M-a
339 @kindex C-M-e
340 @kindex C-M-h
341 @findex beginning-of-defun
342 @findex end-of-defun
343 @findex mark-defun
344 The commands to move to the beginning and end of the current defun are
345 @kbd{C-M-a} (@code{beginning-of-defun}) and @kbd{C-M-e} (@code{end-of-defun}).
346
347 @kindex C-M-h @r{(C mode)}
348 @findex c-mark-function
349 If you wish to operate on the current defun, use @kbd{C-M-h}
350 (@code{mark-defun}) which puts point at the beginning and mark at the end
351 of the current or next defun. For example, this is the easiest way to get
352 ready to move the defun to a different place in the text. In C mode,
353 @kbd{C-M-h} runs the function @code{c-mark-function}, which is almost the
354 same as @code{mark-defun}; the difference is that it backs up over the
355 argument declarations, function name and returned data type so that the
356 entire C function is inside the region. @xref{Marking Objects}.
357
358 @cindex open-parenthesis in leftmost column
359 @cindex ( in leftmost column
360 Emacs assumes that any open-parenthesis found in the leftmost column
361 is the start of a defun. Therefore, @strong{never put an
362 open-parenthesis at the left margin in a Lisp file unless it is the
363 start of a top-level list. Never put an open-brace or other opening
364 delimiter at the beginning of a line of C code unless it starts the body
365 of a function.} The most likely problem case is when you want an
366 opening delimiter at the start of a line inside a string. To avoid
367 trouble, put an escape character (@samp{\}, in C and Emacs Lisp,
368 @samp{/} in some other Lisp dialects) before the opening delimiter. It
369 will not affect the contents of the string.
370
371 In the remotest past, the original Emacs found defuns by moving upward a
372 level of parentheses until there were no more levels to go up. This always
373 required scanning all the way back to the beginning of the buffer, even for
374 a small function. To speed up the operation, Emacs was changed to assume
375 that any @samp{(} (or other character assigned the syntactic class of
376 opening-delimiter) at the left margin is the start of a defun. This
377 heuristic is nearly always right and avoids the costly scan; however,
378 it mandates the convention described above.
379
380 @node Program Indent
381 @section Indentation for Programs
382 @cindex indentation for programs
383
384 The best way to keep a program properly indented is to use Emacs to
385 reindent it as you change it. Emacs has commands to indent properly
386 either a single line, a specified number of lines, or all of the lines
387 inside a single parenthetical grouping.
388
389 @menu
390 * Basic Indent:: Indenting a single line.
391 * Multi-line Indent:: Commands to reindent many lines at once.
392 * Lisp Indent:: Specifying how each Lisp function should be indented.
393 * C Indent:: Extra features for indenting C and related modes.
394 * Custom C Indent:: Controlling indentation style for C and related modes.
395 @end menu
396
397 Emacs also provides a Lisp pretty-printer in the library @code{pp}.
398 This program reformats a Lisp object with indentation chosen to look nice.
399
400 @node Basic Indent
401 @subsection Basic Program Indentation Commands
402
403 @c WideCommands
404 @table @kbd
405 @item @key{TAB}
406 Adjust indentation of current line.
407 @item C-j
408 Equivalent to @key{RET} followed by @key{TAB} (@code{newline-and-indent}).
409 @end table
410
411 @kindex TAB @r{(programming modes)}
412 @findex c-indent-command
413 @findex indent-line-function
414 The basic indentation command is @key{TAB}, which gives the current line
415 the correct indentation as determined from the previous lines. The
416 function that @key{TAB} runs depends on the major mode; it is @code{indent-for-tab-command}
417 in Lisp mode, @code{c-indent-command} in C mode, etc. These functions
418 understand different syntaxes for different languages, but they all do
419 about the same thing. @key{TAB} in any programming-language major mode
420 inserts or deletes whitespace at the beginning of the current line,
421 independent of where point is in the line. If point is inside the
422 whitespace at the beginning of the line, @key{TAB} leaves it at the end of
423 that whitespace; otherwise, @key{TAB} leaves point fixed with respect to
424 the characters around it.
425
426 Use @kbd{C-q @key{TAB}} to insert a tab at point.
427
428 @kindex C-j
429 @findex newline-and-indent
430 When entering lines of new code, use @kbd{C-j} (@code{newline-and-indent}),
431 which is equivalent to a @key{RET} followed by a @key{TAB}. @kbd{C-j} creates
432 a blank line and then gives it the appropriate indentation.
433
434 @key{TAB} indents the second and following lines of the body of a
435 parenthetical grouping each under the preceding one; therefore, if you
436 alter one line's indentation to be nonstandard, the lines below will
437 tend to follow it. This behavior is convenient in cases where you have
438 overridden the standard result of @key{TAB} because you find it
439 unaesthetic for a particular line.
440
441 Remember that an open-parenthesis, open-brace or other opening delimiter
442 at the left margin is assumed by Emacs (including the indentation routines)
443 to be the start of a function. Therefore, you must never have an opening
444 delimiter in column zero that is not the beginning of a function, not even
445 inside a string. This restriction is vital for making the indentation
446 commands fast; you must simply accept it. @xref{Defuns}, for more
447 information on this.
448
449 @node Multi-line Indent
450 @subsection Indenting Several Lines
451
452 When you wish to reindent several lines of code which have been altered
453 or moved to a different level in the list structure, you have several
454 commands available.
455
456 @table @kbd
457 @item C-M-q
458 Reindent all the lines within one list (@code{indent-sexp}).
459 @item C-u @key{TAB}
460 Shift an entire list rigidly sideways so that its first line
461 is properly indented.
462 @item C-M-\
463 Reindent all lines in the region (@code{indent-region}).
464 @end table
465
466 @kindex C-M-q
467 @findex indent-sexp
468 You can reindent the contents of a single list by positioning point
469 before the beginning of it and typing @kbd{C-M-q} (@code{indent-sexp} in
470 Lisp mode, @code{c-indent-exp} in C mode; also bound to other suitable
471 commands in other modes). The indentation of the line the sexp starts on
472 is not changed; therefore, only the relative indentation within the list,
473 and not its position, is changed. To correct the position as well, type a
474 @key{TAB} before the @kbd{C-M-q}.
475
476 @kindex C-u TAB
477 If the relative indentation within a list is correct but the
478 indentation of its first line is not, go to that line and type @kbd{C-u
479 @key{TAB}}. @key{TAB} with a numeric argument reindents the current
480 line as usual, then reindents by the same amount all the lines in the
481 grouping starting on the current line. In other words, it reindents the
482 whole grouping rigidly as a unit. It is clever, though, and does not
483 alter lines that start inside strings, or C preprocessor lines when in C
484 mode.
485
486 Another way to specify the range to be reindented is with the region.
487 The command @kbd{C-M-\} (@code{indent-region}) applies @key{TAB} to
488 every line whose first character is between point and mark.
489
490 @node Lisp Indent
491 @subsection Customizing Lisp Indentation
492 @cindex customizing Lisp indentation
493
494 The indentation pattern for a Lisp expression can depend on the function
495 called by the expression. For each Lisp function, you can choose among
496 several predefined patterns of indentation, or define an arbitrary one with
497 a Lisp program.
498
499 The standard pattern of indentation is as follows: the second line of the
500 expression is indented under the first argument, if that is on the same
501 line as the beginning of the expression; otherwise, the second line is
502 indented underneath the function name. Each following line is indented
503 under the previous line whose nesting depth is the same.
504
505 @vindex lisp-indent-offset
506 If the variable @code{lisp-indent-offset} is non-@code{nil}, it overrides
507 the usual indentation pattern for the second line of an expression, so that
508 such lines are always indented @code{lisp-indent-offset} more columns than
509 the containing list.
510
511 @vindex lisp-body-indent
512 The standard pattern is overridden for certain functions. Functions
513 whose names start with @code{def} always indent the second line by
514 @code{lisp-body-indent} extra columns beyond the open-parenthesis
515 starting the expression.
516
517 The standard pattern can be overridden in various ways for individual
518 functions, according to the @code{lisp-indent-function} property of the
519 function name. There are four possibilities for this property:
520
521 @table @asis
522 @item @code{nil}
523 This is the same as no property; the standard indentation pattern is used.
524 @item @code{defun}
525 The pattern used for function names that start with @code{def} is used for
526 this function also.
527 @item a number, @var{number}
528 The first @var{number} arguments of the function are
529 @dfn{distinguished} arguments; the rest are considered the @dfn{body}
530 of the expression. A line in the expression is indented according to
531 whether the first argument on it is distinguished or not. If the
532 argument is part of the body, the line is indented @code{lisp-body-indent}
533 more columns than the open-parenthesis starting the containing
534 expression. If the argument is distinguished and is either the first
535 or second argument, it is indented @emph{twice} that many extra columns.
536 If the argument is distinguished and not the first or second argument,
537 the standard pattern is followed for that line.
538 @item a symbol, @var{symbol}
539 @var{symbol} should be a function name; that function is called to
540 calculate the indentation of a line within this expression. The
541 function receives two arguments:
542 @table @asis
543 @item @var{state}
544 The value returned by @code{parse-partial-sexp} (a Lisp primitive for
545 indentation and nesting computation) when it parses up to the
546 beginning of this line.
547 @item @var{pos}
548 The position at which the line being indented begins.
549 @end table
550 @noindent
551 It should return either a number, which is the number of columns of
552 indentation for that line, or a list whose car is such a number. The
553 difference between returning a number and returning a list is that a
554 number says that all following lines at the same nesting level should
555 be indented just like this one; a list says that following lines might
556 call for different indentations. This makes a difference when the
557 indentation is being computed by @kbd{C-M-q}; if the value is a
558 number, @kbd{C-M-q} need not recalculate indentation for the following
559 lines until the end of the list.
560 @end table
561
562 @node C Indent
563 @subsection Commands for C Indentation
564
565 Here are the commands for indentation in C mode and related modes:
566
567 @table @code
568 @item C-c C-q
569 @kindex C-c C-q @r{(C mode)}
570 @findex c-indent-defun
571 Reindent the current top-level function definition or aggregate type
572 declaration (@code{c-indent-defun}).
573
574 @item C-M-q
575 @kindex C-M-q @r{(C mode)}
576 @findex c-indent-exp
577 Reindent each line in the balanced expression that follows point
578 (@code{c-indent-exp}). A prefix argument inhibits error checking and
579 warning messages about invalid syntax.
580
581 @item @key{TAB}
582 @findex c-indent-command
583 Reindent the current line, and/or in some cases insert a tab character
584 (@code{c-indent-command}).
585
586 If @code{c-tab-always-indent} is @code{t}, this command always reindents
587 the current line and does nothing else. This is the default.
588
589 If that variable is @code{nil}, this command reindents the current line
590 only if point is at the left margin or in the line's indentation;
591 otherwise, it inserts a tab (or the equivalent number of spaces,
592 if @code{indent-tabs-mode} is @code{nil}).
593
594 Any other value (not @code{nil} or @code{t}) means always reindent the
595 line, and also insert a tab if within a comment, a string, or a
596 preprocessor directive.
597
598 @item C-u @key{TAB}
599 Reindent the current line according to its syntax; also rigidly reindent
600 any other lines of the expression that starts on the current line.
601 @xref{Multi-line Indent}.
602 @end table
603
604 To reindent the whole current buffer, type @kbd{C-x h C-M-\}. This
605 first selects the whole buffer as the region, then reindents that
606 region.
607
608 To reindent the current block, use @kbd{C-M-u C-M-q}. This moves
609 to the front of the block and then reindents it all.
610
611 @node Custom C Indent
612 @subsection Customizing C Indentation
613
614 C mode and related modes use a simple yet flexible mechanism for
615 customizing indentation. The mechanism works in two steps: first it
616 classifies the line syntactically according to its contents and context;
617 second, it associates each kind of syntactic construct with an
618 indentation offset which you can customize.
619
620 @menu
621 * Syntactic Analysis::
622 * Indentation Calculation::
623 * Changing Indent Style::
624 * Syntactic Symbols::
625 * Variables for C Indent::
626 * C Indent Styles::
627 @end menu
628
629 @node Syntactic Analysis
630 @subsubsection Step 1---Syntactic Analysis
631 @cindex syntactic analysis
632
633 In the first step, the C indentation mechanism looks at the line
634 before the one you are currently indenting and determines the syntactic
635 components of the construct on that line. It builds a list of these
636 syntactic components, each of which contains a @dfn{syntactic symbol}
637 and sometimes also a buffer position. Some syntactic symbols describe
638 grammatical elements, for example @code{statement} and
639 @code{substatement}; others describe locations amidst grammatical
640 elements, for example @code{class-open} and @code{knr-argdecl}.
641
642 Conceptually, a line of C code is always indented relative to the
643 indentation of some line higher up in the buffer. This is represented
644 by the buffer positions in the syntactic component list.
645
646 Here is an example. Suppose we have the following code in a C++ mode
647 buffer (the line numbers don't actually appear in the buffer):
648
649 @example
650 1: void swap (int& a, int& b)
651 2: @{
652 3: int tmp = a;
653 4: a = b;
654 5: b = tmp;
655 6: @}
656 @end example
657
658 If you type @kbd{C-c C-s} (which runs the command
659 @code{c-show-syntactic-information}) on line 4, it shows the result of
660 the indentation mechanism for that line:
661
662 @example
663 ((statement . 32))
664 @end example
665
666 This indicates that the line is a statement and it is indented
667 relative to buffer position 32, which happens to be the @samp{i} in
668 @code{int} on line 3. If you move the cursor to line 3 and type
669 @kbd{C-c C-s}, it displays this:
670
671 @example
672 ((defun-block-intro . 28))
673 @end example
674
675 This indicates that the @code{int} line is the first statement in a
676 block, and is indented relative to buffer position 28, which is the
677 brace just after the function header.
678
679 @noindent
680 Here is another example:
681
682 @example
683 1: int add (int val, int incr, int doit)
684 2: @{
685 3: if (doit)
686 4: @{
687 5: return (val + incr);
688 6: @}
689 7: return (val);
690 8: @}
691 @end example
692
693 @noindent
694 Typing @kbd{C-c C-s} on line 4 displays this:
695
696 @example
697 ((substatement-open . 43))
698 @end example
699
700 This says that the brace @emph{opens} a substatement block. By the
701 way, a @dfn{substatement} indicates the line after an @code{if},
702 @code{else}, @code{while}, @code{do}, @code{switch}, @code{for},
703 @code{try}, @code{catch}, @code{finally}, or @code{synchronized}
704 statement.
705
706 @cindex syntactic component
707 @cindex syntactic symbol
708 @vindex c-syntactic-context
709 Within the C indentation commands, after a line has been analyzed
710 syntactically for indentation, the variable @code{c-syntactic-context}
711 contains a list that describes the results. Each element in this list
712 is a @dfn{syntactic component}: a cons cell containing a syntactic
713 symbol and (optionally) its corresponding buffer position. There may be
714 several elements in a component list; typically only one element has a
715 buffer position.
716
717 @node Indentation Calculation
718 @subsubsection Step 2---Indentation Calculation
719 @cindex Indentation Calculation
720
721 The C indentation mechanism calculates the indentation for the current
722 line using the list of syntactic components, @code{c-syntactic-context},
723 derived from syntactic analysis. Each component is a cons cell that
724 contains a syntactic symbol and may also contain a buffer position.
725
726 Each component contributes to the final total indentation of the line
727 in two ways. First, the syntactic symbol identifies an element of
728 @code{c-offsets-alist}, which is an association list mapping syntactic
729 symbols into indentation offsets. Each syntactic symbol's offset adds
730 to the total indentation. Second, if the component includes a buffer
731 position, the column number of that position adds to the indentation.
732 All these offsets and column numbers, added together, give the total
733 indentation.
734
735 The following examples demonstrate the workings of the C indentation
736 mechanism:
737
738 @example
739 1: void swap (int& a, int& b)
740 2: @{
741 3: int tmp = a;
742 4: a = b;
743 5: b = tmp;
744 6: @}
745 @end example
746
747 Suppose that point is on line 3 and you type @key{TAB} to reindent the
748 line. As explained above (@pxref{Syntactic Analysis}), the syntactic
749 component list for that line is:
750
751 @example
752 ((defun-block-intro . 28))
753 @end example
754
755 In this case, the indentation calculation first looks up
756 @code{defun-block-intro} in the @code{c-offsets-alist} alist. Suppose
757 that it finds the integer 2; it adds this to the running total
758 (initialized to zero), yielding a updated total indentation of 2 spaces.
759
760 The next step is to find the column number of buffer position 28.
761 Since the brace at buffer position 28 is in column zero, this adds 0 to
762 the running total. Since this line has only one syntactic component,
763 the total indentation for the line is 2 spaces.
764
765 @example
766 1: int add (int val, int incr, int doit)
767 2: @{
768 3: if (doit)
769 4: @{
770 5: return(val + incr);
771 6: @}
772 7: return(val);
773 8: @}
774 @end example
775
776 If you type @key{TAB} on line 4, the same process is performed, but
777 with different data. The syntactic component list for this line is:
778
779 @example
780 ((substatement-open . 43))
781 @end example
782
783 Here, the indentation calculation's first job is to look up the
784 symbol @code{substatement-open} in @code{c-offsets-alist}. Let's assume
785 that the offset for this symbol is 2. At this point the running total
786 is 2 (0 + 2 = 2). Then it adds the column number of buffer position 43,
787 which is the @samp{i} in @code{if} on line 3. This character is in
788 column 2 on that line. Adding this yields a total indentation of 4
789 spaces.
790
791 @vindex c-strict-syntax-p
792 If a syntactic symbol in the analysis of a line does not appear in
793 @code{c-offsets-alist}, it is ignored; if in addition the variable
794 @code{c-strict-syntax-p} is non-@code{nil}, it is an error.
795
796 @node Changing Indent Style
797 @subsubsection Changing Indentation Style
798
799 There are two ways to customize the indentation style for the C-like
800 modes. First, you can select one of several predefined styles, each of
801 which specifies offsets for all the syntactic symbols. For more
802 flexibility, you can customize the handling of individual syntactic
803 symbols. @xref{Syntactic Symbols}, for a list of all defined syntactic
804 symbols.
805
806 @table @kbd
807 @item M-x c-set-style @key{RET} @var{style} @key{RET}
808 Select predefined indentation style @var{style}. Type @kbd{?} when
809 entering @var{style} to see a list of supported styles; to find out what
810 a style looks like, select it and reindent some C code.
811
812 @item C-c C-o @var{symbol} @key{RET} @var{offset} @key{RET}
813 Set the indentation offset for syntactic symbol @var{symbol}
814 (@code{c-set-offset}). The second argument @var{offset} specifies the
815 new indentation offset.
816 @end table
817
818 The @code{c-offsets-alist} variable controls the amount of
819 indentation to give to each syntactic symbol. Its value is an
820 association list, and each element of the list has the form
821 @code{(@var{syntactic-symbol} . @var{offset})}. By changing the offsets
822 for various syntactic symbols, you can customize indentation in fine
823 detail. To change this alist, use @code{c-set-offset} (see below).
824
825 Each offset value in @code{c-offsets-alist} can be an integer, a
826 function or variable name, a list, or one of the following symbols: @code{+},
827 @code{-}, @code{++}, @code{--}, @code{*}, or @code{/}, indicating positive or negative
828 multiples of the variable @code{c-basic-offset}. Thus, if you want to
829 change the levels of indentation to be 3 spaces instead of 2 spaces, set
830 @code{c-basic-offset} to 3.
831
832 Using a function as the offset value provides the ultimate flexibility
833 in customizing indentation. The function is called with a single
834 argument containing the @code{cons} of the syntactic symbol and
835 the buffer position, if any. The function should return an integer
836 offset.
837
838 If the offset value is a list, its elements are processed according
839 to the rules above until a non-@code{nil} value is found. That value is
840 then added to the total indentation in the normal manner. The primary
841 use for this is to combine the results of several functions.
842
843 @kindex C-c C-o @r{(C mode)}
844 @findex c-set-offset
845 The command @kbd{C-c C-o} (@code{c-set-offset}) is the easiest way to
846 set offsets, both interactively or in your @file{~/.emacs} file. First
847 specify the syntactic symbol, then the offset you want. @xref{Syntactic
848 Symbols}, for a list of valid syntactic symbols and their meanings.
849
850 @node Syntactic Symbols
851 @subsubsection Syntactic Symbols
852
853 Here is a table of valid syntactic symbols for indentation in C and
854 related modes, with their syntactic meanings. Normally, most of these
855 symbols are assigned offsets in @code{c-offsets-alist}.
856
857 @table @code
858 @item string
859 Inside a multi-line string.
860
861 @item c
862 Inside a multi-line C style block comment.
863
864 @item defun-open
865 On a brace that opens a function definition.
866
867 @item defun-close
868 On a brace that closes a function definition.
869
870 @item defun-block-intro
871 In the first line in a top-level defun.
872
873 @item class-open
874 On a brace that opens a class definition.
875
876 @item class-close
877 On a brace that closes a class definition.
878
879 @item inline-open
880 On a brace that opens an in-class inline method.
881
882 @item inline-close
883 On a brace that closes an in-class inline method.
884
885 @item extern-lang-open
886 On a brace that opens an external language block.
887
888 @item extern-lang-close
889 On a brace that closes an external language block.
890
891 @item func-decl-cont
892 The region between a function definition's argument list and the defun
893 opening brace (excluding K&R function definitions). In C, you cannot
894 put anything but whitespace and comments between them; in C++ and Java,
895 @code{throws} declarations and other things can appear in this context.
896
897 @item knr-argdecl-intro
898 On the first line of a K&R C argument declaration.
899
900 @item knr-argdecl
901 In one of the subsequent lines in a K&R C argument declaration.
902
903 @item topmost-intro
904 On the first line in a topmost construct definition.
905
906 @item topmost-intro-cont
907 On the topmost definition continuation lines.
908
909 @item member-init-intro
910 On the first line in a member initialization list.
911
912 @item member-init-cont
913 On one of the subsequent member initialization list lines.
914
915 @item inher-intro
916 On the first line of a multiple inheritance list.
917
918 @item inher-cont
919 On one of the subsequent multiple inheritance lines.
920
921 @item block-open
922 On a statement block open brace.
923
924 @item block-close
925 On a statement block close brace.
926
927 @item brace-list-open
928 On the opening brace of an @code{enum} or @code{static} array list.
929
930 @item brace-list-close
931 On the closing brace of an @code{enum} or @code{static} array list.
932
933 @item brace-list-intro
934 On the first line in an @code{enum} or @code{static} array list.
935
936 @item brace-list-entry
937 On one of the subsequent lines in an @code{enum} or @code{static} array
938 list.
939
940 @item brace-entry-open
941 On one of the subsequent lines in an @code{enum} or @code{static} array
942 list, when the line begins with an open brace.
943
944 @item statement
945 On an ordinary statement.
946
947 @item statement-cont
948 On a continuation line of a statement.
949
950 @item statement-block-intro
951 On the first line in a new statement block.
952
953 @item statement-case-intro
954 On the first line in a @code{case} ``block.''
955
956 @item statement-case-open
957 On the first line in a @code{case} block starting with brace.
958
959 @item inexpr-statement
960 On a statement block inside an expression. This is used for a GNU
961 extension to the C language, and for Pike special functions that take a
962 statement block as an argument.
963
964 @item inexpr-class
965 On a class definition inside an expression. This is used for anonymous
966 classes and anonymous array initializers in Java.
967
968 @item substatement
969 On the first line after an @code{if}, @code{while}, @code{for},
970 @code{do}, or @code{else}.
971
972 @item substatement-open
973 On the brace that opens a substatement block.
974
975 @item case-label
976 On a @code{case} or @code{default} label.
977
978 @item access-label
979 On a C++ @code{private}, @code{protected}, or @code{public} access label.
980
981 @item label
982 On any ordinary label.
983
984 @item do-while-closure
985 On the @code{while} that ends a @code{do}-@code{while} construct.
986
987 @item else-clause
988 On the @code{else} of an @code{if}-@code{else} construct.
989
990 @item catch-clause
991 On the @code{catch} and @code{finally} lines in
992 @code{try}@dots{}@code{catch} constructs in C++ and Java.
993
994 @item comment-intro
995 On a line containing only a comment introduction.
996
997 @item arglist-intro
998 On the first line in an argument list.
999
1000 @item arglist-cont
1001 On one of the subsequent argument list lines when no arguments follow on
1002 the same line as the arglist opening parenthesis.
1003
1004 @item arglist-cont-nonempty
1005 On one of the subsequent argument list lines when at least one argument
1006 follows on the same line as the arglist opening parenthesis.
1007
1008 @item arglist-close
1009 On the closing parenthesis of an argument list.
1010
1011 @item stream-op
1012 On one of the lines continuing a stream operator construct.
1013
1014 @item inclass
1015 On a construct that is nested inside a class definition. The
1016 indentation is relative to the open brace of the class definition.
1017
1018 @item inextern-lang
1019 On a construct that is nested inside an external language block.
1020
1021 @item inexpr-statement
1022 On the first line of statement block inside an expression. This is used
1023 for the GCC extension to C that uses the syntax @code{(@{ @dots{} @})}.
1024 It is also used for the special functions that takes a statement block
1025 as an argument in Pike.
1026
1027 @item inexpr-class
1028 On the first line of a class definition inside an expression. This is
1029 used for anonymous classes and anonymous array initializers in Java.
1030
1031 @item cpp-macro
1032 On the start of a cpp macro.
1033
1034 @item friend
1035 On a C++ @code{friend} declaration.
1036
1037 @item objc-method-intro
1038 On the first line of an Objective-C method definition.
1039
1040 @item objc-method-args-cont
1041 On one of the lines continuing an Objective-C method definition.
1042
1043 @item objc-method-call-cont
1044 On one of the lines continuing an Objective-C method call.
1045
1046 @item inlambda
1047 Like @code{inclass}, but used inside lambda (i.e. anonymous) functions. Only
1048 used in Pike.
1049
1050 @item lambda-intro-cont
1051 On a line continuing the header of a lambda function, between the
1052 @code{lambda} keyword and the function body. Only used in Pike.
1053 @end table
1054
1055 @node Variables for C Indent
1056 @subsubsection Variables for C Indentation
1057
1058 This section describes additional variables which control the
1059 indentation behavior of C mode and related mode.
1060
1061 @table @code
1062 @item c-offsets-alist
1063 @vindex c-offsets-alist
1064 Association list of syntactic symbols and their indentation offsets.
1065 You should not set this directly, only with @code{c-set-offset}.
1066 @xref{Changing Indent Style}, for details.
1067
1068 @item c-style-alist
1069 @vindex c-style-alist
1070 Variable for defining indentation styles; see below.
1071
1072 @item c-basic-offset
1073 @vindex c-basic-offset
1074 Amount of basic offset used by @code{+} and @code{-} symbols in
1075 @code{c-offsets-alist}.@refill
1076
1077 @item c-special-indent-hook
1078 @vindex c-special-indent-hook
1079 Hook for user-defined special indentation adjustments. This hook is
1080 called after a line is indented by C mode and related modes.
1081 @end table
1082
1083 The variable @code{c-style-alist} specifies the predefined indentation
1084 styles. Each element has form @code{(@var{name}
1085 @var{variable-setting}@dots{})}, where @var{name} is the name of the
1086 style. Each @var{variable-setting} has the form @code{(@var{variable}
1087 . @var{value})}; @var{variable} is one of the customization variables
1088 used by C mode, and @var{value} is the value for that variable when
1089 using the selected style.
1090
1091 When @var{variable} is @code{c-offsets-alist}, that is a special case:
1092 @var{value} is appended to the front of the value of @code{c-offsets-alist}
1093 instead of replacing that value outright. Therefore, it is not necessary
1094 for @var{value} to specify each and every syntactic symbol---only those
1095 for which the style differs from the default.
1096
1097 The indentation of lines containing only comments is also affected by
1098 the variable @code{c-comment-only-line-offset} (@pxref{Comments in C}).
1099
1100 @node C Indent Styles
1101 @subsubsection C Indentation Styles
1102 @cindex c indentation styles
1103
1104 A @dfn{C style} is a collection of indentation style customizations.
1105 Emacs comes with several predefined indentation styles for C and related
1106 modes, including @code{gnu}, @code{k&r}, @code{bsd}, @code{stroustrup},
1107 @code{linux}, @code{python}, @code{java}, @code{whitesmith},
1108 @code{ellemtel}, @code{cc-mode}, and @code{user}.
1109
1110 @findex c-set-style
1111 @vindex c-default-style
1112 To choose the style you want, use the command @kbd{M-x c-set-style}.
1113 Specify a style name as an argument (case is not significant in C style
1114 names). The chosen style only affects newly visited buffers, not those
1115 you are already editing. You can also set the variable
1116 @code{c-default-style} to specify the style for various major modes.
1117 Its value should be an alist, in which each element specifies one major
1118 mode and which indentation style to use for it. For example,
1119
1120 @example
1121 (setq c-default-style
1122 '((java-mode . "java") (other . "gnu")))
1123 @end example
1124
1125 @noindent
1126 specifies an explicit choice for Java mode, and the default @samp{gnu}
1127 style for the other C-like modes.
1128
1129 The style @code{gnu} defines the formatting recommend by the GNU
1130 Project; it is the default, so as to encourage the indentation we
1131 recommend. However, if you make changes in variables such as
1132 @code{c-basic-offset} and @code{c-offsets-alist} in your
1133 @file{~/.emacs} file, your changes override the what @code{gnu} style
1134 says.
1135
1136 @findex c-add-style
1137 To define a new C indentation style, call the function
1138 @code{c-add-style}:
1139
1140 @example
1141 (c-add-style @var{name} @var{values} @var{use-now})
1142 @end example
1143
1144 @noindent
1145 Here @var{name} is the name of the new style (a string), and
1146 @var{values} is an alist whose elements have the form
1147 @code{(@var{variable} . @var{value})}. The variables you specify should
1148 be among those documented in @ref{Variables for C Indent}.
1149
1150 If @var{use-now} is non-@code{nil}, @code{c-add-style} selects the new
1151 style after defining it.
1152
1153 @node Matching
1154 @section Automatic Display Of Matching Parentheses
1155 @cindex matching parentheses
1156 @cindex parentheses, displaying matches
1157
1158 The Emacs parenthesis-matching feature is designed to show
1159 automatically how parentheses match in the text. Whenever you type a
1160 self-inserting character that is a closing delimiter, the cursor moves
1161 momentarily to the location of the matching opening delimiter, provided
1162 that is on the screen. If it is not on the screen, some text near it is
1163 displayed in the echo area. Either way, you can tell what grouping is
1164 being closed off.
1165
1166 In Lisp, automatic matching applies only to parentheses. In C, it
1167 applies to braces and brackets too. Emacs knows which characters to regard
1168 as matching delimiters based on the syntax table, which is set by the major
1169 mode. @xref{Syntax}.
1170
1171 If the opening delimiter and closing delimiter are mismatched---such as
1172 in @samp{[x)}---a warning message is displayed in the echo area. The
1173 correct matches are specified in the syntax table.
1174
1175 @vindex blink-matching-paren
1176 @vindex blink-matching-paren-distance
1177 @vindex blink-matching-delay
1178 Three variables control parenthesis match display.
1179 @code{blink-matching-paren} turns the feature on or off; @code{nil}
1180 turns it off, but the default is @code{t} to turn match display on.
1181 @code{blink-matching-delay} says how many seconds to wait; the default
1182 is 1, but on some systems it is useful to specify a fraction of a
1183 second. @code{blink-matching-paren-distance} specifies how many
1184 characters back to search to find the matching opening delimiter. If
1185 the match is not found in that far, scanning stops, and nothing is
1186 displayed. This is to prevent scanning for the matching delimiter from
1187 wasting lots of time when there is no match. The default is 12,000.
1188
1189 @cindex Show Paren mode
1190 @cindex highlighting matching parentheses
1191 @findex show-paren-mode
1192 Show Paren mode provides a more powerful kind of automatic
1193 parenthesis matching. Whenever point is after a close parenthesis,
1194 the close parenthesis and its matching open parenthesis are both
1195 highlighted; otherwise, if point is before an open parenthesis, the
1196 matching close parenthesis is highlighted. (There is no need to
1197 highlight the open parenthesis after point because the cursor appears
1198 on top of that character.) Use the command @kbd{M-x show-paren-mode}
1199 to enable or disable this mode.
1200
1201 By default, @code{show-paren-mode} uses colors to highlight the
1202 parentheses. However, if your display doesn't support colors, you can
1203 customize the faces @code{show-paren-match-face} and
1204 @code{show-paren-mismatch-face} to use other attributes, such as bold or
1205 underline. @xref{Face Customization}.
1206
1207 @node Comments
1208 @section Manipulating Comments
1209 @cindex comments
1210
1211 Because comments are such an important part of programming, Emacs
1212 provides special commands for editing and inserting comments.
1213
1214 @menu
1215 * Comment Commands::
1216 * Multi-Line Comments::
1217 * Options for Comments::
1218 @end menu
1219
1220 @node Comment Commands
1221 @subsection Comment Commands
1222 @cindex indentation for comments
1223
1224 The comment commands in this table insert, kill and align comments.
1225 They are described in this section and following sections.
1226
1227 @table @kbd
1228 @item M-;
1229 Insert or realign comment on current line; alternatively, comment or
1230 uncomment the region (@code{comment-dwim}).
1231 @item C-u M-;
1232 Kill comment on current line (@code{comment-kill}).
1233 @item C-x ;
1234 Set comment column (@code{set-comment-column}).
1235 @item C-M-j
1236 Like @key{RET} followed by inserting and aligning a comment
1237 (@code{indent-new-comment-line}).
1238 @item M-x comment-region
1239 Add or remove comment delimiters on all the lines in the region.
1240 @end table
1241
1242 @kindex M-;
1243 @findex comment-dwim
1244 The command to create or align a comment is @kbd{M-;}
1245 (@code{comment-dwim}). The word ``dwim'' is an acronym for ``Do What
1246 I Mean''; it indicates that this command can be used for many
1247 different jobs relating to comments, depending on the situation where
1248 you use it.
1249
1250 If there is no comment already on the line, @kbd{M-;} inserts a new
1251 comment, aligned at a specific column called the @dfn{comment column}.
1252 The new comment begins with the string Emacs thinks comments should
1253 start with (the value of @code{comment-start}; see below). Point is
1254 after that string, so you can insert the text of the comment right
1255 away. If the major mode has specified a string to terminate comments,
1256 @kbd{M-;} inserts that too, to keep the syntax valid.
1257
1258 If the text of the line extends past the comment column, then the
1259 comment start string is indented to a suitable boundary (usually, at
1260 least one space is inserted).
1261
1262 You can also use @kbd{M-;} to align an existing comment. If a line
1263 already contains the comment-start string, @kbd{M-;} reindents it to
1264 the conventional alignment and moves point after it. (Exception:
1265 comments starting in column 0 are not moved.) Even when an existing
1266 comment is properly aligned, @kbd{M-;} is still useful for moving
1267 directly to the start of the text inside the comment.
1268
1269 @findex comment-kill
1270 @kindex C-u M-;
1271 @kbd{C-u M-;} kills any comment on the current line, along with the
1272 whitespace before it. To reinsert the comment on another line, move
1273 to the end of that line, do @kbd{C-y}, and then do @kbd{M-;} to
1274 realign it.
1275
1276 Note that @kbd{C-u M-;} is not a distinct key; it is @kbd{M-;}
1277 (@code{comment-dwim}) with a prefix argument. That command is
1278 programmed so that when it receives a prefix argument it calls
1279 @code{comment-kill}. However, @code{comment-kill} is a valid command
1280 in its own right, and you can bind it directly to a key if you wish.
1281
1282 @kbd{M-;} does two other jobs when used with an active region in
1283 Transient Mark mode (@pxref{Transient Mark}). Then it either adds or
1284 removes comment delimiters on each line of the region. (If every line
1285 is a comment, it removes comment delimiters from each; otherwise, it
1286 adds comment delimiters to each.) If you are not using Transient Mark
1287 mode, then you should use the commands @code{comment-region} and
1288 @code{uncomment-region} to do these jobs (@pxref{Multi-Line Comments}).
1289 A prefix argument used in these circumstances specifies how many
1290 comment delimiters to add or how many to delete.
1291
1292 Some major modes have special rules for indenting certain kinds of
1293 comments in certain contexts. For example, in Lisp code, comments which
1294 start with two semicolons are indented as if they were lines of code,
1295 instead of at the comment column. Comments which start with three
1296 semicolons are supposed to start at the left margin. Emacs understands
1297 these conventions by indenting a double-semicolon comment using @key{TAB},
1298 and by not changing the indentation of a triple-semicolon comment at all.
1299
1300 @example
1301 ;; This function is just an example
1302 ;;; Here either two or three semicolons are appropriate.
1303 (defun foo (x)
1304 ;;; And now, the first part of the function:
1305 ;; The following line adds one.
1306 (1+ x)) ; This line adds one.
1307 @end example
1308
1309 In C code, a comment preceded on its line by nothing but whitespace
1310 is indented like a line of code.
1311
1312 @node Multi-Line Comments
1313 @subsection Multiple Lines of Comments
1314
1315 @kindex C-M-j
1316 @cindex blank lines in programs
1317 @findex indent-new-comment-line
1318 If you are typing a comment and wish to continue it on another line,
1319 you can use the command @kbd{C-M-j} (@code{indent-new-comment-line}).
1320 This terminates the comment you are typing, creates a new blank line
1321 afterward, and begins a new comment indented under the old one. When
1322 Auto Fill mode is on, going past the fill column while typing a comment
1323 causes the comment to be continued in just this fashion. If point is
1324 not at the end of the line when @kbd{C-M-j} is typed, the text on
1325 the rest of the line becomes part of the new comment line.
1326
1327 @findex comment-region
1328 To turn existing lines into comment lines, use the @kbd{M-x
1329 comment-region} command. It adds comment delimiters to the lines that start
1330 in the region, thus commenting them out. With a negative argument, it
1331 does the opposite---it deletes comment delimiters from the lines in the
1332 region.
1333
1334 With a positive argument, @code{comment-region} duplicates the last
1335 character of the comment start sequence it adds; the argument specifies
1336 how many copies of the character to insert. Thus, in Lisp mode,
1337 @kbd{C-u 2 M-x comment-region} adds @samp{;;} to each line. Duplicating
1338 the comment delimiter is a way of calling attention to the comment. It
1339 can also affect how the comment is indented. In Lisp, for proper
1340 indentation, you should use an argument of two, if between defuns, and
1341 three, if within a defun.
1342
1343 @node Options for Comments
1344 @subsection Options Controlling Comments
1345
1346 @vindex comment-column
1347 @kindex C-x ;
1348 @findex set-comment-column
1349 The comment column is stored in the variable @code{comment-column}. You
1350 can set it to a number explicitly. Alternatively, the command @kbd{C-x ;}
1351 (@code{set-comment-column}) sets the comment column to the column point is
1352 at. @kbd{C-u C-x ;} sets the comment column to match the last comment
1353 before point in the buffer, and then does a @kbd{M-;} to align the
1354 current line's comment under the previous one.
1355
1356 The variable @code{comment-column} is per-buffer: setting the variable
1357 in the normal fashion affects only the current buffer, but there is a
1358 default value which you can change with @code{setq-default}.
1359 @xref{Locals}. Many major modes initialize this variable for the
1360 current buffer.
1361
1362 @vindex comment-start-skip
1363 The comment commands recognize comments based on the regular
1364 expression that is the value of the variable @code{comment-start-skip}.
1365 Make sure this regexp does not match the null string. It may match more
1366 than the comment starting delimiter in the strictest sense of the word;
1367 for example, in C mode the value of the variable is @code{@t{"/\\*+
1368 *"}}, which matches extra stars and spaces after the @samp{/*} itself.
1369 (Note that @samp{\\} is needed in Lisp syntax to include a @samp{\} in
1370 the string, which is needed to deny the first star its special meaning
1371 in regexp syntax. @xref{Regexps}.)
1372
1373 @vindex comment-start
1374 @vindex comment-end
1375 When a comment command makes a new comment, it inserts the value of
1376 @code{comment-start} to begin it. The value of @code{comment-end} is
1377 inserted after point, so that it will follow the text that you will insert
1378 into the comment. In C mode, @code{comment-start} has the value
1379 @w{@code{"/* "}} and @code{comment-end} has the value @w{@code{" */"}}.
1380
1381 @vindex comment-padding
1382 The variable @code{comment-padding} specifies how many spaces
1383 @code{comment-region} should insert on each line between the
1384 comment delimiter and the line's original text. The default is 1.
1385
1386 @vindex comment-multi-line
1387 The variable @code{comment-multi-line} controls how @kbd{C-M-j}
1388 (@code{indent-new-comment-line}) behaves when used inside a comment. If
1389 @code{comment-multi-line} is @code{nil}, as it normally is, then the
1390 comment on the starting line is terminated and a new comment is started
1391 on the new following line. If @code{comment-multi-line} is not
1392 @code{nil}, then the new following line is set up as part of the same
1393 comment that was found on the starting line. This is done by not
1394 inserting a terminator on the old line, and not inserting a starter on
1395 the new line. In languages where multi-line comments work, the choice
1396 of value for this variable is a matter of taste.
1397
1398 @vindex comment-indent-function
1399 The variable @code{comment-indent-function} should contain a function
1400 that will be called to compute the indentation for a newly inserted
1401 comment or for aligning an existing comment. It is set differently by
1402 various major modes. The function is called with no arguments, but with
1403 point at the beginning of the comment, or at the end of a line if a new
1404 comment is to be inserted. It should return the column in which the
1405 comment ought to start. For example, in Lisp mode, the indent hook
1406 function bases its decision on how many semicolons begin an existing
1407 comment, and on the code in the preceding lines.
1408
1409 @node Balanced Editing
1410 @section Editing Without Unbalanced Parentheses
1411
1412 @table @kbd
1413 @item M-(
1414 Put parentheses around next sexp(s) (@code{insert-parentheses}).
1415 @item M-)
1416 Move past next close parenthesis and reindent
1417 (@code{move-past-close-and-reindent}).
1418 @end table
1419
1420 @kindex M-(
1421 @kindex M-)
1422 @findex insert-parentheses
1423 @findex move-past-close-and-reindent
1424 The commands @kbd{M-(} (@code{insert-parentheses}) and @kbd{M-)}
1425 (@code{move-past-close-and-reindent}) are designed to facilitate a style
1426 of editing which keeps parentheses balanced at all times. @kbd{M-(}
1427 inserts a pair of parentheses, either together as in @samp{()}, or, if
1428 given an argument, around the next several sexps. It leaves point after
1429 the open parenthesis. The command @kbd{M-)} moves past the close
1430 parenthesis, deleting any indentation preceding it, and indenting with
1431 @kbd{C-j} after it.
1432
1433 For example, instead of typing @kbd{( F O O )}, you can type @kbd{M-(
1434 F O O}, which has the same effect except for leaving the cursor before
1435 the close parenthesis.
1436
1437 @vindex parens-require-spaces
1438 @kbd{M-(} may insert a space before the open parenthesis, depending on
1439 the syntax class of the preceding character. Set
1440 @code{parens-require-spaces} to @code{nil} value if you wish to inhibit
1441 this.
1442
1443 @findex check-parens
1444 @cindex unbalanced parentheses and quotes
1445 You can use @kbd{M-x check-parens} to find any unbalanced
1446 parentheses and unbalanced string quotes in a buffer.
1447
1448 @node Symbol Completion
1449 @section Completion for Symbol Names
1450 @cindex completion (symbol names)
1451
1452 Usually completion happens in the minibuffer. But one kind of completion
1453 is available in all buffers: completion for symbol names.
1454
1455 @kindex M-TAB
1456 The character @kbd{M-@key{TAB}} runs a command to complete the partial
1457 symbol before point against the set of meaningful symbol names. Any
1458 additional characters determined by the partial name are inserted at
1459 point.
1460
1461 If the partial name in the buffer has more than one possible completion
1462 and they have no additional characters in common, a list of all possible
1463 completions is displayed in another window.
1464
1465 @cindex tags-based completion
1466 @cindex Info index completion
1467 @findex complete-symbol
1468 In most programming language major modes, @kbd{M-@key{TAB}} runs the
1469 command @code{complete-symbol}, which provides two kinds of completion.
1470 Normally it does completion based on a tags table (@pxref{Tags}); with a
1471 numeric argument (regardless of the value), it does completion based on
1472 the names listed in the Info file indexes for your language. Thus, to
1473 complete the name of a symbol defined in your own program, use
1474 @kbd{M-@key{TAB}} with no argument; to complete the name of a standard
1475 library function, use @kbd{C-u M-@key{TAB}}. Of course, Info-based
1476 completion works only if there is an Info file for the standard library
1477 functions of your language, and only if it is installed at your site.
1478
1479 @cindex Lisp symbol completion
1480 @cindex completion (Lisp symbols)
1481 @findex lisp-complete-symbol
1482 In Emacs-Lisp mode, the name space for completion normally consists of
1483 nontrivial symbols present in Emacs---those that have function
1484 definitions, values or properties. However, if there is an
1485 open-parenthesis immediately before the beginning of the partial symbol,
1486 only symbols with function definitions are considered as completions.
1487 The command which implements this is @code{lisp-complete-symbol}.
1488
1489 In Text mode and related modes, @kbd{M-@key{TAB}} completes words
1490 based on the spell-checker's dictionary. @xref{Spelling}.
1491
1492 @node Which Function
1493 @section Which Function Mode
1494
1495 Which Function mode is a minor mode that displays the current function
1496 name in the mode line, as you move around in a buffer.
1497
1498 @findex which-function-mode
1499 @vindex which-func-modes
1500 To enable (or disable) Which Function mode, use the command @kbd{M-x
1501 which-function-mode}. This command is global; it applies to all
1502 buffers, both existing ones and those yet to be created. However, this
1503 only affects certain major modes, those listed in the value of
1504 @code{which-func-modes}. (If the value is @code{t}, then Which Function
1505 mode applies to all major modes that know how to support it---which are
1506 the major modes that support Imenu.)
1507
1508 @node Hideshow
1509 @section Hideshow minor mode
1510
1511 @findex hs-minor-mode
1512 Hideshow minor mode provides selective display of portions of a
1513 file, known as @dfn{blocks}. You can use @kbd{M-x hs-minor-mode} to
1514 enable or disable this mode, or add @code{hs-minor-mode} to the mode
1515 hook for certain major modes in order to enable it automatically for
1516 those modes.
1517
1518 Just what constitutes a block depends on the major mode. In C mode
1519 or C++ mode, they are delimited by braces, while in Lisp mode and
1520 similar modes they are delimited by parentheses. Multi-line comments
1521 also count as blocks.
1522
1523 @findex hs-hide-all
1524 @findex hs-hide-block
1525 @findex hs-show-all
1526 @findex hs-show-block
1527 @findex hs-show-region
1528 @findex hs-hide-level
1529 @findex hs-minor-mode
1530 @kindex C-c @@ C-h
1531 @kindex C-c @@ C-s
1532 @kindex C-c @@ C-M-h
1533 @kindex C-c @@ C-M-s
1534 @kindex C-c @@ C-r
1535 @kindex C-c @@ C-l
1536 @kindex S-Mouse-2
1537 @table @kbd
1538 @item C-c @@ C-h
1539 Hide the current block (@code{hs-hide-block}).
1540 @item C-c @@ C-s
1541 Show the current block (@code{hs-show-block}).
1542 @item C-c @@ C-c
1543 Either hide or show the current block (@code{hs-toggle-hiding})
1544 @item S-Mouse-2
1545 Either hide or show the block you click on (@code{hs-mouse-toggle-hiding})
1546 @item C-c @@ C-M-h
1547 Hide all top-level blocks (@code{hs-hide-all}).
1548 @item C-c @@ C-M-s
1549 Show everything in the buffer (@code{hs-show-all}).
1550 @item C-c @@ C-l
1551 Hide all blocks @var{n} levels below this block
1552 (@code{hs-hide-level}).
1553 @end table
1554
1555 @vindex hs-hide-comments-when-hiding-all
1556 @vindex hs-show-hidden-short-form
1557 @vindex hs-isearch-open
1558 @vindex hs-special-modes-alist
1559 These user options exist for customizing Hideshow mode.
1560
1561 @table @code
1562 @item hs-hide-comments-when-hiding-all
1563 Non-@code{nil} says that @kbd{hs-hide-all} should hide comments too.
1564 @item hs-show-hidden-short-form
1565 Non-@code{nil} says to omit the last line in a form (saving screen
1566 space).
1567 @item hs-isearch-open
1568 Specifies what kind of hidden blocks to open in Isearch mode.
1569 @item hs-special-modes-alist
1570 Specifies
1571 Initializes Hideshow variables for different modes.
1572 @end table
1573
1574 @node Glasses
1575 @section Glasses minor mode
1576 @cindex Glasses mode
1577 @cindex identifiers, making long ones readable
1578 @cindex StudlyCaps, making them readable
1579 @findex glasses-mode
1580
1581 Glasses minor mode makes @samp{unreadableIdentifiersLikeThis}
1582 readable by altering the display. It can do this in two different
1583 ways: by displaying underscores between an lower-case letter and the
1584 following capital letter, or by emboldening the capital letters. It
1585 does not alter the buffer text, only the way they display, so you can
1586 use it even on read-only buffers. You can use the command @kbd{M-x
1587 glasses-mode} to enable or disable the mode; you can also add
1588 @code{glasses-mode} to the mode hook of appropriate programming
1589 language major modes.
1590
1591 @node Documentation
1592 @section Documentation Commands
1593
1594 As you edit Lisp code to be run in Emacs, the commands @kbd{C-h f}
1595 (@code{describe-function}) and @kbd{C-h v} (@code{describe-variable}) can
1596 be used to print documentation of functions and variables that you want to
1597 call. These commands use the minibuffer to read the name of a function or
1598 variable to document, and display the documentation in a window.
1599
1600 For extra convenience, these commands provide default arguments based on
1601 the code in the neighborhood of point. @kbd{C-h f} sets the default to the
1602 function called in the innermost list containing point. @kbd{C-h v} uses
1603 the symbol name around or adjacent to point as its default.
1604
1605 @cindex Eldoc mode
1606 @findex eldoc-mode
1607 For Emacs Lisp code, you can also use Eldoc mode. This minor mode
1608 constantly displays in the echo area the argument list for the function
1609 being called at point. (In other words, it finds the function call that
1610 point is contained in, and displays the argument list of that function.)
1611 Eldoc mode applies in Emacs Lisp and Lisp Interaction modes only. Use
1612 the command @kbd{M-x eldoc-mode} to enable or disable this feature.
1613
1614 @findex info-lookup-symbol
1615 @findex info-lookup-file
1616 @kindex C-h C-i
1617 For C, Lisp, and other languages, you can use @kbd{C-h C-i}
1618 (@code{info-lookup-symbol}) to view the Info documentation for a symbol.
1619 You specify the symbol with the minibuffer; by default, it uses the
1620 symbol that appears in the buffer at point. The major mode determines
1621 where to look for documentation for the symbol---which Info files and
1622 which indices. You can also use @kbd{M-x info-lookup-file} to look for
1623 documentation for a file name. Currently this supports the following
1624 modes: Awk, Autoconf, Bison, C, Emacs Lisp, LaTeX, M4,
1625 Makefile, Octave, Perl, Scheme and Texinfo, provided you have installed
1626 the relevant Info files, which are typically available with the appropriate GNU
1627 package.
1628
1629 @findex manual-entry
1630 @cindex manual pages
1631 You can read the ``man page'' for an operating system command, library
1632 function, or system call, with the @kbd{M-x manual-entry} command. It
1633 runs the @code{man} program to format the man page, and runs it
1634 asynchronously if your system permits, so that you can keep on editing
1635 while the page is being formatted. (MS-DOS and MS-Windows 3 do not
1636 permit asynchronous subprocesses, so on these systems you cannot edit
1637 while Emacs waits for @code{man} to exit.) The result goes in a buffer
1638 named @samp{*Man @var{topic}*}. These buffers use a special major mode,
1639 Man mode, that facilitates scrolling and examining other manual pages.
1640 For details, type @kbd{C-h m} while in a man page buffer.
1641
1642 @cindex sections of manual pages
1643 Man pages are classified into @dfn{sections}; sometimes there are
1644 man pages with the same name in different sections. To read a man
1645 page from a specific section, type @samp{@var{topic}(@var{section})} or
1646 @samp{@var{section} @var{topic}} when @kbd{M-x manual-entry} prompts
1647 for the topic. For example, to read the man page for the C library
1648 function @code{chmod} (as opposed to a command by the same name), type
1649 @kbd{M-x manual-entry @key{RET} chmod(2v) @key{RET}} (assuming
1650 @code{chmod} is in section @samp{2v}).
1651
1652 If you do not specify a section, the results depend on how the
1653 @code{man} command works on your system. Some of them display only
1654 the first man page they find. Others display all man pages that have
1655 the specified name, so you can page between them with the @kbd{M-n}
1656 and @kbd{M-p} keys. The mode line shows how many manual pages are
1657 available in the Man buffer.
1658
1659 @vindex Man-fontify-manpage-flag
1660 For a long man page, setting the faces properly can take substantial
1661 time. By default, Emacs uses faces in man pages if Emacs can display
1662 different fonts or colors. You can turn off use of faces in man pages
1663 by setting the variable @code{Man-fontify-manpage-flag} to @code{nil}.
1664
1665 @findex Man-fontify-manpage
1666 If you insert the text of a man page into an Emacs buffer in some
1667 other fashion, you can use the command @kbd{M-x Man-fontify-manpage} to
1668 perform the same conversions that @kbd{M-x manual-entry} does.
1669
1670 @findex woman
1671 @cindex manual pages, on MS-DOS/MS-Windows
1672 An alternative way of reading manual pages is the @kbd{M-x woman}
1673 command@footnote{The name of the command, @code{woman}, is an acronym
1674 for ``w/o (without) man,'' since it doesn't use the @code{man}
1675 program.}. Unlike @kbd{M-x man}, it does not run any external
1676 programs to format and display the man pages; instead it does the job
1677 in Emacs Lisp, so it works on systems such as MS-Windows, where the
1678 @code{man} program and other the programs it needs are not readily
1679 available. @kbd{M-x woman} prompts for a name of a manual page, and
1680 provides completion based on the list of manual pages that are
1681 installed on your machine; the list of available manual pages is
1682 computed automatically the first time you invoke @code{woman}. The
1683 word at point in the current buffer is used to suggest the default
1684 name of the manual page.
1685
1686 With a numeric argument, @kbd{M-x woman} recomputes the list of the
1687 manual pages used for completion. This is useful if you add or delete
1688 manual pages.
1689
1690 If you type a name of a manual page and @kbd{M-x woman} finds that
1691 several manual pages by the same name exist in different sections, it
1692 pops up a window with possible candidates asking you to choose one of
1693 them.
1694
1695 @vindex woman-manpath
1696 By default, @kbd{M-x woman} looks up the manual pages in directories
1697 listed by the @code{MANPATH} environment variable. (If @code{MANPATH}
1698 is not set, @code{woman} uses a suitable default value, which can be
1699 customized.) More precisely, @code{woman} looks for subdirectories that
1700 match the shell wildcard @file{man*} in each one of these directories,
1701 and tries to find the manual pages in those subdirectories. When first
1702 invoked, @kbd{M-x woman} converts the value of @code{MANPATH} to a list
1703 of directory names and stores that list in the @code{woman-manpath}
1704 variable. By changing the value of this variable, you can customize the
1705 list of directories where @code{woman} looks for manual pages.
1706
1707 @vindex woman-path
1708 In addition, you can augment the list of directories searched by
1709 @code{woman} by setting the value of the @code{woman-path} variable.
1710 This variable should hold a list of specific directories which
1711 @code{woman} should search, in addition to those in
1712 @code{woman-manpath}. Unlike @code{woman-manpath}, the directories in
1713 @code{woman-path} are searched for the manual pages, not for @file{man*}
1714 subdirectories.
1715
1716 @findex woman-find-file
1717 Occasionally, you might need to display manual pages that are not in
1718 any of the directories listed by @code{woman-manpath} and
1719 @code{woman-path}. The @kbd{M-x woman-find-file} command prompts for a
1720 name of a manual page file, with completion, and then formats and
1721 displays that file like @kbd{M-x woman} does.
1722
1723 @vindex woman-dired-keys
1724 First time you invoke @kbd{M-x woman}, it defines the Dired @kbd{W}
1725 key to run the @code{woman-find-file} command on the current line's
1726 file. You can disable this by setting the variable
1727 @code{woman-dired-keys} to @code{nil}. @xref{Dired}. In addition, the
1728 Tar-mode @kbd{w} key is bound to @code{woman-find-file} on the current
1729 line's archive member.
1730
1731 For more information about setting up and using @kbd{M-x woman}, see
1732 @ref{Top, WoMan, Browse UN*X Manual Pages WithOut Man, woman, The WoMan
1733 Manual}.
1734
1735 Eventually the GNU project hopes to replace most man pages with
1736 better-organized manuals that you can browse with Info. @xref{Misc
1737 Help}. Since this process is only partially completed, it is still
1738 useful to read manual pages.
1739
1740 @node Change Log
1741 @section Change Logs
1742
1743 @cindex change log
1744 @kindex C-x 4 a
1745 @findex add-change-log-entry-other-window
1746 The Emacs command @kbd{C-x 4 a} adds a new entry to the change log
1747 file for the file you are editing
1748 (@code{add-change-log-entry-other-window}). If that file is actually
1749 a backup file, it makes an entry appropriate for the file's
1750 parent---that is useful for making log entries for functions that
1751 have been deleted in the current version.
1752
1753 A change log file contains a chronological record of when and why you
1754 have changed a program, consisting of a sequence of entries describing
1755 individual changes. Normally it is kept in a file called
1756 @file{ChangeLog} in the same directory as the file you are editing, or
1757 one of its parent directories. A single @file{ChangeLog} file can
1758 record changes for all the files in its directory and all its
1759 subdirectories.
1760
1761 A change log entry starts with a header line that contains your name,
1762 your email address (taken from the variable @code{user-mail-address}),
1763 and the current date and time. Aside from these header lines, every
1764 line in the change log starts with a space or a tab. The bulk of the
1765 entry consists of @dfn{items}, each of which starts with a line starting
1766 with whitespace and a star. Here are two entries, both dated in May
1767 1993, each with two items:
1768
1769 @iftex
1770 @medbreak
1771 @end iftex
1772 @smallexample
1773 1993-05-25 Richard Stallman <rms@@gnu.org>
1774
1775 * man.el: Rename symbols `man-*' to `Man-*'.
1776 (manual-entry): Make prompt string clearer.
1777
1778 * simple.el (blink-matching-paren-distance):
1779 Change default to 12,000.
1780
1781 1993-05-24 Richard Stallman <rms@@gnu.org>
1782
1783 * vc.el (minor-mode-map-alist): Don't use it if it's void.
1784 (vc-cancel-version): Doc fix.
1785 @end smallexample
1786
1787 One entry can describe several changes; each change should have its
1788 own item. Normally there should be a blank line between items. When
1789 items are related (parts of the same change, in different places), group
1790 them by leaving no blank line between them. The second entry above
1791 contains two items grouped in this way.
1792
1793 @kbd{C-x 4 a} visits the change log file and creates a new entry
1794 unless the most recent entry is for today's date and your name. It
1795 also creates a new item for the current file. For many languages, it
1796 can even guess the name of the function or other object that was
1797 changed.
1798
1799 @vindex add-log-keep-changes-together
1800 When the option @code{add-log-keep-changes-together} is
1801 non-@code{nil}, @kbd{C-x 4 a} adds to any existing entry for the file
1802 rather than starting a new entry.
1803
1804 @vindex change-log-version-info-enabled
1805 @vindex change-log-version-number-regexp-list
1806 @cindex file version in change log entries
1807 If the value of the variable @code{change-log-version-info-enabled}
1808 is non-@code{nil}, @kbd{C-x 4 a} ads the file's version number to the
1809 change log entry. It finds the version number by searching the first
1810 ten percent of the file, using regular expressions from the variable
1811 @code{change-log-version-number-regexp-list}.
1812
1813 @cindex Change Log mode
1814 @findex change-log-mode
1815 The change log file is visited in Change Log mode. In this major
1816 mode, each bunch of grouped items counts as one paragraph, and each
1817 entry is considered a page. This facilitates editing the entries.
1818 @kbd{C-j} and auto-fill indent each new line like the previous line;
1819 this is convenient for entering the contents of an entry.
1820
1821 @findex change-log-merge
1822 You can use the command @kbd{M-x change-log-merge} to merge other
1823 log files into a buffer in Change Log Mode, preserving the date
1824 ordering of entries.
1825
1826 @findex change-log-redate
1827 @cindex converting change log date style
1828 Versions of Emacs before 20.1 used a different format for the time of
1829 the change log entry:
1830
1831 @smallexample
1832 Fri May 25 11:23:23 1993 Richard Stallman <rms@@gnu.org>
1833 @end smallexample
1834
1835 @noindent
1836 The @kbd{M-x change-log-redate} command converts all the old-style
1837 date entries in the change log file visited in the current buffer to
1838 the new format, to make the file uniform in style. This is handy when
1839 entries are contributed by many different people, some of whom use old
1840 versions of Emacs.
1841
1842 Version control systems are another way to keep track of changes in your
1843 program and keep a change log. @xref{Log Buffer}.
1844
1845 @node Authors
1846 @section @file{AUTHORS} files
1847 @cindex @file{AUTHORS} file
1848
1849 Programs which have many contributors usually include a file named
1850 @file{AUTHORS} in their distribution, which lists the individual
1851 contributions. Emacs has a special command for maintaining the
1852 @file{AUTHORS} file that is part of the Emacs distribution.
1853
1854 @findex authors
1855 The @kbd{M-x authors} command prompts for the name of the root of the
1856 Emacs source directory. It then scans @file{ChageLog} files and Lisp
1857 source files under that directory for information about authors of
1858 individual packages and people who made changes in source files, and
1859 puts the information it gleans into a buffer named @samp{*Authors*}.
1860 You can then edit the contents of that buffer and merge it with the
1861 exisiting @file{AUTHORS} file.
1862
1863 Do not assume that this command finds all the contributors; don't
1864 assume that a person not listed in the output was not a contributor.
1865 If you merged in someone's contribution and did not put his name
1866 in the change log, he won't show up in @kbd{M-x authors} either.
1867
1868 @node Tags
1869 @section Tags Tables
1870 @cindex tags table
1871
1872 A @dfn{tags table} is a description of how a multi-file program is
1873 broken up into files. It lists the names of the component files and the
1874 names and positions of the functions (or other named subunits) in each
1875 file. Grouping the related files makes it possible to search or replace
1876 through all the files with one command. Recording the function names
1877 and positions makes possible the @kbd{M-.} command which finds the
1878 definition of a function by looking up which of the files it is in.
1879
1880 Tags tables are stored in files called @dfn{tags table files}. The
1881 conventional name for a tags table file is @file{TAGS}.
1882
1883 Each entry in the tags table records the name of one tag, the name of the
1884 file that the tag is defined in (implicitly), and the position in that file
1885 of the tag's definition.
1886
1887 Just what names from the described files are recorded in the tags table
1888 depends on the programming language of the described file. They
1889 normally include all file names, functions and subroutines, and may
1890 also include global variables, data types, and anything else
1891 convenient. Each name recorded is called a @dfn{tag}.
1892
1893 @cindex C++ class browser, tags
1894 @cindex tags, C++
1895 @cindex class browser, C++
1896 @cindex Ebrowse
1897 See also the Ebrowse facility, which is tailored for C++.
1898 @xref{Top,, Ebrowse, ebrowse, Ebrowse User's Manual}.
1899
1900 @menu
1901 * Tag Syntax:: Tag syntax for various types of code and text files.
1902 * Create Tags Table:: Creating a tags table with @code{etags}.
1903 * Etags Regexps:: Create arbitrary tags using regular expressions.
1904 * Select Tags Table:: How to visit a tags table.
1905 * Find Tag:: Commands to find the definition of a specific tag.
1906 * Tags Search:: Using a tags table for searching and replacing.
1907 * List Tags:: Listing and finding tags defined in a file.
1908 @end menu
1909
1910 @node Tag Syntax
1911 @subsection Source File Tag Syntax
1912
1913 Here is how tag syntax is defined for the most popular languages:
1914
1915 @itemize @bullet
1916 @item
1917 In C code, any C function or typedef is a tag, and so are definitions of
1918 @code{struct}, @code{union} and @code{enum}.
1919 @code{#define} macro definitions and @code{enum} constants are also
1920 tags, unless you specify @samp{--no-defines} when making the tags table.
1921 Similarly, global variables are tags, unless you specify
1922 @samp{--no-globals}. Use of @samp{--no-globals} and @samp{--no-defines}
1923 can make the tags table file much smaller.
1924
1925 You can tag function declarations and external variables in addition
1926 to function definitions by giving the @samp{--declarations} option to
1927 @code{etags}.
1928
1929 @item
1930 In C++ code, in addition to all the tag constructs of C code, member
1931 functions are also recognized, and optionally member variables if you
1932 use the @samp{--members} option. Tags for variables and functions in
1933 classes are named @samp{@var{class}::@var{variable}} and
1934 @samp{@var{class}::@var{function}}. @code{operator} definitions have
1935 tag names like @samp{operator+}.
1936
1937 @item
1938 In Java code, tags include all the constructs recognized in C++, plus
1939 the @code{interface}, @code{extends} and @code{implements} constructs.
1940 Tags for variables and functions in classes are named
1941 @samp{@var{class}.@var{variable}} and @samp{@var{class}.@var{function}}.
1942
1943 @item
1944 In La@TeX{} text, the argument of any of the commands @code{\chapter},
1945 @code{\section}, @code{\subsection}, @code{\subsubsection},
1946 @code{\eqno}, @code{\label}, @code{\ref}, @code{\cite}, @code{\bibitem},
1947 @code{\part}, @code{\appendix}, @code{\entry}, or @code{\index}, is a
1948 tag.@refill
1949
1950 Other commands can make tags as well, if you specify them in the
1951 environment variable @env{TEXTAGS} before invoking @code{etags}. The
1952 value of this environment variable should be a colon-separated list of
1953 command names. For example,
1954
1955 @example
1956 TEXTAGS="def:newcommand:newenvironment"
1957 export TEXTAGS
1958 @end example
1959
1960 @noindent
1961 specifies (using Bourne shell syntax) that the commands @samp{\def},
1962 @samp{\newcommand} and @samp{\newenvironment} also define tags.
1963
1964 @item
1965 In Lisp code, any function defined with @code{defun}, any variable
1966 defined with @code{defvar} or @code{defconst}, and in general the first
1967 argument of any expression that starts with @samp{(def} in column zero, is
1968 a tag.
1969
1970 @item
1971 In Scheme code, tags include anything defined with @code{def} or with a
1972 construct whose name starts with @samp{def}. They also include variables
1973 set with @code{set!} at top level in the file.
1974 @end itemize
1975
1976 Several other languages are also supported:
1977
1978 @itemize @bullet
1979
1980 @item
1981 In Ada code, functions, procedures, packages, tasks, and types are
1982 tags. Use the @samp{--packages-only} option to create tags for
1983 packages only.
1984
1985 In Ada, the same name can be used for different kinds of entity
1986 (e.g.@:, for a procedure and for a function). Also, for things like
1987 packages, procedures and functions, there is the spec (i.e.@: the
1988 interface) and the body (i.e.@: the implementation). To make it
1989 easier to pick the definition you want, Ada tag name have suffixes
1990 indicating the type of entity:
1991
1992 @table @samp
1993 @item /b
1994 package body.
1995 @item /f
1996 function.
1997 @item /k
1998 task.
1999 @item /p
2000 procedure.
2001 @item /s
2002 package spec.
2003 @item /t
2004 type.
2005 @end table
2006
2007 Thus, @kbd{M-x find-tag @key{RET} bidule/b @key{RET}} will go
2008 directly to the body of the package @code{bidule}, while @kbd{M-x
2009 find-tag @key{RET} bidule @key{RET}} will just search for any tag
2010 @code{bidule}.
2011
2012 @item
2013 In assembler code, labels appearing at the beginning of a line,
2014 followed by a colon, are tags.
2015
2016 @item
2017 In Bison or Yacc input files, each rule defines as a tag the nonterminal
2018 it constructs. The portions of the file that contain C code are parsed
2019 as C code.
2020
2021 @item
2022 In Cobol code, tags are paragraph names; that is, any word starting in
2023 column 8 and followed by a period.
2024
2025 @item
2026 In Erlang code, the tags are the functions, records, and macros defined
2027 in the file.
2028
2029 @item
2030 In Fortran code, functions, subroutines and blockdata are tags.
2031
2032 @item
2033 In makefiles, targets are tags.
2034
2035 @item
2036 In Objective C code, tags include Objective C definitions for classes,
2037 class categories, methods, and protocols.
2038
2039 @item
2040 In Pascal code, the tags are the functions and procedures defined in
2041 the file.
2042
2043 @item
2044 In Perl code, the tags are the procedures defined by the @code{sub},
2045 @code{my} and @code{local} keywords. Use @samp{--globals} if you want
2046 to tag global variables.
2047
2048 @item
2049 In PostScript code, the tags are the functions.
2050
2051 @item
2052 In Prolog code, a tag name appears at the left margin.
2053
2054 @item
2055 In Python code, @code{def} or @code{class} at the beginning of a line
2056 generate a tag.
2057 @end itemize
2058
2059 You can also generate tags based on regexp matching (@pxref{Etags
2060 Regexps}) to handle other formats and languages.
2061
2062 @node Create Tags Table
2063 @subsection Creating Tags Tables
2064 @cindex @code{etags} program
2065
2066 The @code{etags} program is used to create a tags table file. It knows
2067 the syntax of several languages, as described in
2068 @iftex
2069 the previous section.
2070 @end iftex
2071 @ifinfo
2072 @ref{Tag Syntax}.
2073 @end ifinfo
2074 Here is how to run @code{etags}:
2075
2076 @example
2077 etags @var{inputfiles}@dots{}
2078 @end example
2079
2080 @noindent
2081 The @code{etags} program reads the specified files, and writes a tags
2082 table named @file{TAGS} in the current working directory.
2083
2084 If the specified files don't exist, @code{etags} looks for
2085 compressed versions of them and uncompresses them to read them. Under
2086 MS-DOS, @code{etags} also looks for file names like @file{mycode.cgz}
2087 if it is given @samp{mycode.c} on the command line and @file{mycode.c}
2088 does not exist.
2089
2090 @code{etags} recognizes the language used in an input file based on
2091 its file name and contents. You can specify the language with the
2092 @samp{--language=@var{name}} option, described below.
2093
2094 If the tags table data become outdated due to changes in the files
2095 described in the table, the way to update the tags table is the same
2096 way it was made in the first place. But it is not necessary to do
2097 this very often.
2098
2099 If the tags table fails to record a tag, or records it for the wrong
2100 file, then Emacs cannot possibly find its definition. However, if the
2101 position recorded in the tags table becomes a little bit wrong (due to
2102 some editing in the file that the tag definition is in), the only
2103 consequence is a slight delay in finding the tag. Even if the stored
2104 position is very wrong, Emacs will still find the tag, but it must
2105 search the entire file for it.
2106
2107 So you should update a tags table when you define new tags that you want
2108 to have listed, or when you move tag definitions from one file to another,
2109 or when changes become substantial. Normally there is no need to update
2110 the tags table after each edit, or even every day.
2111
2112 One tags table can virtually include another. Specify the included
2113 tags file name with the @samp{--include=@var{file}} option when
2114 creating the file that is to include it. The latter file then acts as
2115 if it covered all the source files specified in the included file, as
2116 well as the files it directly contains.
2117
2118 If you specify the source files with relative file names when you run
2119 @code{etags}, the tags file will contain file names relative to the
2120 directory where the tags file was initially written. This way, you can
2121 move an entire directory tree containing both the tags file and the
2122 source files, and the tags file will still refer correctly to the source
2123 files.
2124
2125 If you specify absolute file names as arguments to @code{etags}, then
2126 the tags file will contain absolute file names. This way, the tags file
2127 will still refer to the same files even if you move it, as long as the
2128 source files remain in the same place. Absolute file names start with
2129 @samp{/}, or with @samp{@var{device}:/} on MS-DOS and MS-Windows.
2130
2131 When you want to make a tags table from a great number of files, you
2132 may have problems listing them on the command line, because some systems
2133 have a limit on its length. The simplest way to circumvent this limit
2134 is to tell @code{etags} to read the file names from its standard input,
2135 by typing a dash in place of the file names, like this:
2136
2137 @smallexample
2138 find . -name "*.[chCH]" -print | etags -
2139 @end smallexample
2140
2141 Use the option @samp{--language=@var{name}} to specify the language
2142 explicitly. You can intermix these options with file names; each one
2143 applies to the file names that follow it. Specify
2144 @samp{--language=auto} to tell @code{etags} to resume guessing the
2145 language from the file names and file contents. Specify
2146 @samp{--language=none} to turn off language-specific processing
2147 entirely; then @code{etags} recognizes tags by regexp matching alone
2148 (@pxref{Etags Regexps}).
2149
2150 @samp{etags --help} prints the list of the languages @code{etags}
2151 knows, and the file name rules for guessing the language. It also prints
2152 a list of all the available @code{etags} options, together with a short
2153 explanation.
2154
2155 @node Etags Regexps
2156 @subsection Etags Regexps
2157
2158 The @samp{--regex} option provides a general way of recognizing tags
2159 based on regexp matching. You can freely intermix it with file names.
2160 Each @samp{--regex} option adds to the preceding ones, and applies only
2161 to the following files. The syntax is:
2162
2163 @smallexample
2164 --regex=/@var{tagregexp}[/@var{nameregexp}]/
2165 @end smallexample
2166
2167 @noindent
2168 where @var{tagregexp} is used to match the lines to tag. It is always
2169 anchored, that is, it behaves as if preceded by @samp{^}. If you want
2170 to account for indentation, just match any initial number of blanks by
2171 beginning your regular expression with @samp{[ \t]*}. In the regular
2172 expressions, @samp{\} quotes the next character, and @samp{\t} stands
2173 for the tab character. Note that @code{etags} does not handle the other
2174 C escape sequences for special characters.
2175
2176 @cindex interval operator (in regexps)
2177 The syntax of regular expressions in @code{etags} is the same as in
2178 Emacs, augmented with the @dfn{interval operator}, which works as in
2179 @code{grep} and @code{ed}. The syntax of an interval operator is
2180 @samp{\@{@var{m},@var{n}\@}}, and its meaning is to match the preceding
2181 expression at least @var{m} times and up to @var{n} times.
2182
2183 You should not match more characters with @var{tagregexp} than that
2184 needed to recognize what you want to tag. If the match is such that
2185 more characters than needed are unavoidably matched by @var{tagregexp}
2186 (as will usually be the case), you should add a @var{nameregexp}, to
2187 pick out just the tag. This will enable Emacs to find tags more
2188 accurately and to do completion on tag names more reliably. You can
2189 find some examples below.
2190
2191 The option @samp{--ignore-case-regex} (or @samp{-c}) works like
2192 @samp{--regex}, except that matching ignores case. This is
2193 appropriate for certain programming languages.
2194
2195 The @samp{-R} option deletes all the regexps defined with
2196 @samp{--regex} options. It applies to the file names following it, as
2197 you can see from the following example:
2198
2199 @smallexample
2200 etags --regex=/@var{reg1}/ voo.doo --regex=/@var{reg2}/ \
2201 bar.ber -R --lang=lisp los.er
2202 @end smallexample
2203
2204 @noindent
2205 Here @code{etags} chooses the parsing language for @file{voo.doo} and
2206 @file{bar.ber} according to their contents. @code{etags} also uses
2207 @var{reg1} to recognize additional tags in @file{voo.doo}, and both
2208 @var{reg1} and @var{reg2} to recognize additional tags in
2209 @file{bar.ber}. @code{etags} uses the Lisp tags rules, and no regexp
2210 matching, to recognize tags in @file{los.er}.
2211
2212 You can specify a regular expression for a particular language, by
2213 writing @samp{@{lang@}} in front of it. Then @code{etags} will use
2214 the regular expression only for files of that language. (@samp{etags
2215 --help} prints the list of languages recognised by @code{etags}.) The
2216 following example tags the @code{DEFVAR} macros in the Emacs source
2217 files, for the C language only:
2218
2219 @smallexample
2220 --regex='@{c@}/[ \t]*DEFVAR_[A-Z_ \t(]+"\([^"]+\)"/'
2221 @end smallexample
2222
2223 @noindent
2224 This feature is particularly useful when you store a list of regular
2225 expressions in a file. The following option syntax instructs
2226 @code{etags} to read two files of regular expressions. The regular
2227 expressions contained in the second file are matched without regard to
2228 case.
2229
2230 @smallexample
2231 --regex=@@first-file --ignore-case-regex=@@second-file
2232 @end smallexample
2233
2234 @noindent
2235 A regex file contains one regular expressions per line. Empty lines,
2236 and lines beginning with space or tab are ignored. When the first
2237 character in a line is @samp{@@}, @code{etags} assumes that the rest
2238 of the line is the name of a file of regular expressions; thus, one
2239 such file can include another file. All the other lines are taken to
2240 be regular expressions. If the first non-whitespace text on the line
2241 is @samp{--}, that line is a comment.
2242
2243 For example, one can create a file called @samp{emacs.tags} with the
2244 following contents:
2245
2246 @smallexample
2247 -- This is for GNU Emacs C source files
2248 @{c@}/[ \t]*DEFVAR_[A-Z_ \t(]+"\([^"]+\)"/\1/
2249 @end smallexample
2250
2251 @noindent
2252 and then use it like this:
2253
2254 @smallexample
2255 etags --regex=@@emacs.tags *.[ch] */*.[ch]
2256 @end smallexample
2257
2258 Here are some more examples. The regexps are quoted to protect them
2259 from shell interpretation.
2260
2261 @itemize @bullet
2262
2263 @item
2264 Tag Octave files:
2265
2266 @smallexample
2267 etags --language=none \
2268 --regex='/[ \t]*function.*=[ \t]*\([^ \t]*\)[ \t]*(/\1/' \
2269 --regex='/###key \(.*\)/\1/' \
2270 --regex='/[ \t]*global[ \t].*/' \
2271 *.m
2272 @end smallexample
2273
2274 @noindent
2275 Note that tags are not generated for scripts, so that you have to add
2276 a line by yourself of the form @samp{###key @var{scriptname}} if you
2277 want to jump to it.
2278
2279 @item
2280 Tag Tcl files:
2281
2282 @smallexample
2283 etags --language=none --regex='/proc[ \t]+\([^ \t]+\)/\1/' *.tcl
2284 @end smallexample
2285
2286 @item
2287 Tag VHDL files:
2288
2289 @smallexample
2290 etags --language=none \
2291 --regex='/[ \t]*\(ARCHITECTURE\|CONFIGURATION\) +[^ ]* +OF/' \
2292 --regex='/[ \t]*\(ATTRIBUTE\|ENTITY\|FUNCTION\|PACKAGE\
2293 \( BODY\)?\|PROCEDURE\|PROCESS\|TYPE\)[ \t]+\([^ \t(]+\)/\3/'
2294 @end smallexample
2295 @end itemize
2296
2297 @node Select Tags Table
2298 @subsection Selecting a Tags Table
2299
2300 @vindex tags-file-name
2301 @findex visit-tags-table
2302 Emacs has at any time one @dfn{selected} tags table, and all the commands
2303 for working with tags tables use the selected one. To select a tags table,
2304 type @kbd{M-x visit-tags-table}, which reads the tags table file name as an
2305 argument. The name @file{TAGS} in the default directory is used as the
2306 default file name.
2307
2308 All this command does is store the file name in the variable
2309 @code{tags-file-name}. Emacs does not actually read in the tags table
2310 contents until you try to use them. Setting this variable yourself is just
2311 as good as using @code{visit-tags-table}. The variable's initial value is
2312 @code{nil}; that value tells all the commands for working with tags tables
2313 that they must ask for a tags table file name to use.
2314
2315 Using @code{visit-tags-table} when a tags table is already loaded
2316 gives you a choice: you can add the new tags table to the current list
2317 of tags tables, or start a new list. The tags commands use all the tags
2318 tables in the current list. If you start a new list, the new tags table
2319 is used @emph{instead} of others. If you add the new table to the
2320 current list, it is used @emph{as well as} the others. When the tags
2321 commands scan the list of tags tables, they don't always start at the
2322 beginning of the list; they start with the first tags table (if any)
2323 that describes the current file, proceed from there to the end of the
2324 list, and then scan from the beginning of the list until they have
2325 covered all the tables in the list.
2326
2327 @vindex tags-table-list
2328 You can specify a precise list of tags tables by setting the variable
2329 @code{tags-table-list} to a list of strings, like this:
2330
2331 @c keep this on two lines for formatting in smallbook
2332 @example
2333 @group
2334 (setq tags-table-list
2335 '("~/emacs" "/usr/local/lib/emacs/src"))
2336 @end group
2337 @end example
2338
2339 @noindent
2340 This tells the tags commands to look at the @file{TAGS} files in your
2341 @file{~/emacs} directory and in the @file{/usr/local/lib/emacs/src}
2342 directory. The order depends on which file you are in and which tags
2343 table mentions that file, as explained above.
2344
2345 Do not set both @code{tags-file-name} and @code{tags-table-list}.
2346
2347 @node Find Tag
2348 @subsection Finding a Tag
2349
2350 The most important thing that a tags table enables you to do is to find
2351 the definition of a specific tag.
2352
2353 @table @kbd
2354 @item M-.@: @var{tag} @key{RET}
2355 Find first definition of @var{tag} (@code{find-tag}).
2356 @item C-u M-.
2357 Find next alternate definition of last tag specified.
2358 @item C-u - M-.
2359 Go back to previous tag found.
2360 @item C-M-. @var{pattern} @key{RET}
2361 Find a tag whose name matches @var{pattern} (@code{find-tag-regexp}).
2362 @item C-u C-M-.
2363 Find the next tag whose name matches the last pattern used.
2364 @item C-x 4 .@: @var{tag} @key{RET}
2365 Find first definition of @var{tag}, but display it in another window
2366 (@code{find-tag-other-window}).
2367 @item C-x 5 .@: @var{tag} @key{RET}
2368 Find first definition of @var{tag}, and create a new frame to select the
2369 buffer (@code{find-tag-other-frame}).
2370 @item M-*
2371 Pop back to where you previously invoked @kbd{M-.} and friends.
2372 @end table
2373
2374 @kindex M-.
2375 @findex find-tag
2376 @kbd{M-.}@: (@code{find-tag}) is the command to find the definition of
2377 a specified tag. It searches through the tags table for that tag, as a
2378 string, and then uses the tags table info to determine the file that the
2379 definition is in and the approximate character position in the file of
2380 the definition. Then @code{find-tag} visits that file, moves point to
2381 the approximate character position, and searches ever-increasing
2382 distances away to find the tag definition.
2383
2384 If an empty argument is given (just type @key{RET}), the sexp in the
2385 buffer before or around point is used as the @var{tag} argument.
2386 @xref{Lists}, for info on sexps.
2387
2388 You don't need to give @kbd{M-.} the full name of the tag; a part
2389 will do. This is because @kbd{M-.} finds tags in the table which
2390 contain @var{tag} as a substring. However, it prefers an exact match
2391 to a substring match. To find other tags that match the same
2392 substring, give @code{find-tag} a numeric argument, as in @kbd{C-u
2393 M-.}; this does not read a tag name, but continues searching the tags
2394 table's text for another tag containing the same substring last used.
2395 If you have a real @key{META} key, @kbd{M-0 M-.}@: is an easier
2396 alternative to @kbd{C-u M-.}.
2397
2398 @kindex C-x 4 .
2399 @findex find-tag-other-window
2400 @kindex C-x 5 .
2401 @findex find-tag-other-frame
2402 Like most commands that can switch buffers, @code{find-tag} has a
2403 variant that displays the new buffer in another window, and one that
2404 makes a new frame for it. The former is @kbd{C-x 4 .}, which invokes
2405 the command @code{find-tag-other-window}. The latter is @kbd{C-x 5 .},
2406 which invokes @code{find-tag-other-frame}.
2407
2408 To move back to places you've found tags recently, use @kbd{C-u -
2409 M-.}; more generally, @kbd{M-.} with a negative numeric argument. This
2410 command can take you to another buffer. @kbd{C-x 4 .} with a negative
2411 argument finds the previous tag location in another window.
2412
2413 @kindex M-*
2414 @findex pop-tag-mark
2415 @vindex find-tag-marker-ring-length
2416 As well as going back to places you've found tags recently, you can go
2417 back to places @emph{from where} you found them. Use @kbd{M-*}, which
2418 invokes the command @code{pop-tag-mark}, for this. Typically you would
2419 find and study the definition of something with @kbd{M-.} and then
2420 return to where you were with @kbd{M-*}.
2421
2422 Both @kbd{C-u - M-.} and @kbd{M-*} allow you to retrace your steps to
2423 a depth determined by the variable @code{find-tag-marker-ring-length}.
2424
2425 @findex find-tag-regexp
2426 @kindex C-M-.
2427 The command @kbd{C-M-.} (@code{find-tag-regexp}) visits the tags that
2428 match a specified regular expression. It is just like @kbd{M-.} except
2429 that it does regexp matching instead of substring matching.
2430
2431 @node Tags Search
2432 @subsection Searching and Replacing with Tags Tables
2433 @cindex search and replace in multiple files
2434 @cindex multiple-file search and replace
2435
2436 The commands in this section visit and search all the files listed in the
2437 selected tags table, one by one. For these commands, the tags table serves
2438 only to specify a sequence of files to search.
2439
2440 @table @kbd
2441 @item M-x tags-search @key{RET} @var{regexp} @key{RET}
2442 Search for @var{regexp} through the files in the selected tags
2443 table.
2444 @item M-x tags-query-replace @key{RET} @var{regexp} @key{RET} @var{replacement} @key{RET}
2445 Perform a @code{query-replace-regexp} on each file in the selected tags table.
2446 @item M-,
2447 Restart one of the commands above, from the current location of point
2448 (@code{tags-loop-continue}).
2449 @end table
2450
2451 @findex tags-search
2452 @kbd{M-x tags-search} reads a regexp using the minibuffer, then
2453 searches for matches in all the files in the selected tags table, one
2454 file at a time. It displays the name of the file being searched so you
2455 can follow its progress. As soon as it finds an occurrence,
2456 @code{tags-search} returns.
2457
2458 @kindex M-,
2459 @findex tags-loop-continue
2460 Having found one match, you probably want to find all the rest. To find
2461 one more match, type @kbd{M-,} (@code{tags-loop-continue}) to resume the
2462 @code{tags-search}. This searches the rest of the current buffer, followed
2463 by the remaining files of the tags table.@refill
2464
2465 @findex tags-query-replace
2466 @kbd{M-x tags-query-replace} performs a single
2467 @code{query-replace-regexp} through all the files in the tags table. It
2468 reads a regexp to search for and a string to replace with, just like
2469 ordinary @kbd{M-x query-replace-regexp}. It searches much like @kbd{M-x
2470 tags-search}, but repeatedly, processing matches according to your
2471 input. @xref{Replace}, for more information on query replace.
2472
2473 @vindex tags-case-fold-search
2474 @cindex case-sensitivity and tags search
2475 You can control the case-sensitivity of tags search commands by
2476 customizing the value of the variable @code{tags-case-fold-search}. The
2477 default is to use the same setting as the value of
2478 @code{case-fold-search} (@pxref{Search Case}).
2479
2480 It is possible to get through all the files in the tags table with a
2481 single invocation of @kbd{M-x tags-query-replace}. But often it is
2482 useful to exit temporarily, which you can do with any input event that
2483 has no special query replace meaning. You can resume the query replace
2484 subsequently by typing @kbd{M-,}; this command resumes the last tags
2485 search or replace command that you did.
2486
2487 The commands in this section carry out much broader searches than the
2488 @code{find-tag} family. The @code{find-tag} commands search only for
2489 definitions of tags that match your substring or regexp. The commands
2490 @code{tags-search} and @code{tags-query-replace} find every occurrence
2491 of the regexp, as ordinary search commands and replace commands do in
2492 the current buffer.
2493
2494 These commands create buffers only temporarily for the files that they
2495 have to search (those which are not already visited in Emacs buffers).
2496 Buffers in which no match is found are quickly killed; the others
2497 continue to exist.
2498
2499 It may have struck you that @code{tags-search} is a lot like
2500 @code{grep}. You can also run @code{grep} itself as an inferior of
2501 Emacs and have Emacs show you the matching lines one by one. This works
2502 much like running a compilation; finding the source locations of the
2503 @code{grep} matches works like finding the compilation errors.
2504 @xref{Compilation}.
2505
2506 @node List Tags
2507 @subsection Tags Table Inquiries
2508
2509 @table @kbd
2510 @item M-x list-tags @key{RET} @var{file} @key{RET}
2511 Display a list of the tags defined in the program file @var{file}.
2512 @item M-x tags-apropos @key{RET} @var{regexp} @key{RET}
2513 Display a list of all tags matching @var{regexp}.
2514 @end table
2515
2516 @findex list-tags
2517 @kbd{M-x list-tags} reads the name of one of the files described by
2518 the selected tags table, and displays a list of all the tags defined in
2519 that file. The ``file name'' argument is really just a string to
2520 compare against the file names recorded in the tags table; it is read as
2521 a string rather than as a file name. Therefore, completion and
2522 defaulting are not available, and you must enter the file name the same
2523 way it appears in the tags table. Do not include a directory as part of
2524 the file name unless the file name recorded in the tags table includes a
2525 directory.
2526
2527 @findex tags-apropos
2528 @vindex tags-apropos-verbose
2529 @kbd{M-x tags-apropos} is like @code{apropos} for tags
2530 (@pxref{Apropos}). It finds all the tags in the selected tags table
2531 whose entries match @var{regexp}, and displays them. If the variable
2532 @code{tags-apropos-verbose} is non-@code{nil}, it displays the names
2533 of the tags files together with the tag names.
2534
2535 @vindex tags-tag-face
2536 @vindex tags-apropos-additional-actions
2537 You can customize the appearance of the output with the face
2538 @code{tags-tag-face}. You can display additional output with @kbd{M-x
2539 tags-apropos} by customizing the variable
2540 @code{tags-apropos-additional-actions}---see its documentation for
2541 details.
2542
2543 You can also use the collection of tag names to complete a symbol
2544 name in the buffer. @xref{Symbol Completion}.
2545
2546 @node Imenu
2547 @section Imenu
2548 @cindex indexes of buffer contents
2549 @cindex buffer content indexes
2550 @cindex tags
2551
2552 The Imenu facility is another way to find definitions or sections
2553 in a file. It is similar in spirit to Tags, but operates on a single
2554 buffer only, and works entirely within Emacs with no need for a separate
2555 tags table.
2556
2557 @findex imenu
2558 @findex imenu-add-menu-bar-index
2559 If you type @kbd{M-x imenu}, it reads the name of a section or
2560 definition in the current buffer, then goes to that section or
2561 definition. You can use completion to specify the name, and a
2562 complete list of possible names is always displayed.
2563
2564 Alternatively you can bind the command @code{imenu} to a mouse
2565 click. Then it displays mouse menus for you to select the section or
2566 definition you want. You can also add the buffer's index to the menu
2567 bar by calling @code{imenu-add-menu-bar-index}. If you want to have
2568 this menu bar item available for all buffers in a certain major mode,
2569 you can do this by adding @code{imenu-add-menu-bar-index} to its mode
2570 hook. But then you will have to wait for the buffer to be searched
2571 for sections and definitions, each time you visit a file which uses
2572 that mode.
2573
2574 @vindex imenu-auto-rescan
2575 When you change the contents of a buffer, if you add or delete
2576 definitions or sections, you can update the buffer's index to
2577 correspond to the new contents by invoking the @samp{*Rescan*} item in
2578 the menu. Rescanning happens automatically if
2579 @code{imenu-auto-rescan} is non-@code{nil}. There is no need to
2580 rescan because of small changes in the text.
2581
2582 @vindex imenu-sort-function
2583 You can customize the way the menus are sorted via the variable
2584 @code{imenu-sort-function}. By default names are ordered as they
2585 occur in the buffer; alphabetic sorting is provided as an alternative.
2586
2587 Imenu provides the information to guide Which Function mode
2588 (@pxref{Which Function}). The Speedbar can also use it
2589 (@pxref{Speedbar}).
2590
2591 @node Emerge, C Modes, Imenu, Programs
2592 @section Merging Files with Emerge
2593 @cindex Emerge
2594 @cindex merging files
2595
2596 It's not unusual for programmers to get their signals crossed and modify
2597 the same program in two different directions. To recover from this
2598 confusion, you need to merge the two versions. Emerge makes this
2599 easier. See also @ref{Comparing Files}, for commands to compare
2600 in a more manual fashion, and @ref{,Ediff,, ediff, The Ediff Manual}.
2601
2602 @menu
2603 * Overview of Emerge:: How to start Emerge. Basic concepts.
2604 * Submodes of Emerge:: Fast mode vs. Edit mode.
2605 Skip Prefers mode and Auto Advance mode.
2606 * State of Difference:: You do the merge by specifying state A or B
2607 for each difference.
2608 * Merge Commands:: Commands for selecting a difference,
2609 changing states of differences, etc.
2610 * Exiting Emerge:: What to do when you've finished the merge.
2611 * Combining in Emerge:: How to keep both alternatives for a difference.
2612 * Fine Points of Emerge:: Misc.
2613 @end menu
2614
2615 @node Overview of Emerge
2616 @subsection Overview of Emerge
2617
2618 To start Emerge, run one of these four commands:
2619
2620 @table @kbd
2621 @item M-x emerge-files
2622 @findex emerge-files
2623 Merge two specified files.
2624
2625 @item M-x emerge-files-with-ancestor
2626 @findex emerge-files-with-ancestor
2627 Merge two specified files, with reference to a common ancestor.
2628
2629 @item M-x emerge-buffers
2630 @findex emerge-buffers
2631 Merge two buffers.
2632
2633 @item M-x emerge-buffers-with-ancestor
2634 @findex emerge-buffers-with-ancestor
2635 Merge two buffers with reference to a common ancestor in a third
2636 buffer.
2637 @end table
2638
2639 @cindex merge buffer (Emerge)
2640 @cindex A and B buffers (Emerge)
2641 The Emerge commands compare two files or buffers, and display the
2642 comparison in three buffers: one for each input text (the @dfn{A buffer}
2643 and the @dfn{B buffer}), and one (the @dfn{merge buffer}) where merging
2644 takes place. The merge buffer shows the full merged text, not just the
2645 differences. Wherever the two input texts differ, you can choose which
2646 one of them to include in the merge buffer.
2647
2648 The Emerge commands that take input from existing buffers use only the
2649 accessible portions of those buffers, if they are narrowed
2650 (@pxref{Narrowing}).
2651
2652 If a common ancestor version is available, from which the two texts to
2653 be merged were both derived, Emerge can use it to guess which
2654 alternative is right. Wherever one current version agrees with the
2655 ancestor, Emerge presumes that the other current version is a deliberate
2656 change which should be kept in the merged version. Use the
2657 @samp{with-ancestor} commands if you want to specify a common ancestor
2658 text. These commands read three file or buffer names---variant A,
2659 variant B, and the common ancestor.
2660
2661 After the comparison is done and the buffers are prepared, the
2662 interactive merging starts. You control the merging by typing special
2663 @dfn{merge commands} in the merge buffer. The merge buffer shows you a
2664 full merged text, not just differences. For each run of differences
2665 between the input texts, you can choose which one of them to keep, or
2666 edit them both together.
2667
2668 The merge buffer uses a special major mode, Emerge mode, with commands
2669 for making these choices. But you can also edit the buffer with
2670 ordinary Emacs commands.
2671
2672 At any given time, the attention of Emerge is focused on one
2673 particular difference, called the @dfn{selected} difference. This
2674 difference is marked off in the three buffers like this:
2675
2676 @example
2677 vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv
2678 @var{text that differs}
2679 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2680 @end example
2681
2682 @noindent
2683 Emerge numbers all the differences sequentially and the mode
2684 line always shows the number of the selected difference.
2685
2686 Normally, the merge buffer starts out with the A version of the text.
2687 But when the A version of a difference agrees with the common ancestor,
2688 then the B version is initially preferred for that difference.
2689
2690 Emerge leaves the merged text in the merge buffer when you exit. At
2691 that point, you can save it in a file with @kbd{C-x C-w}. If you give a
2692 numeric argument to @code{emerge-files} or
2693 @code{emerge-files-with-ancestor}, it reads the name of the output file
2694 using the minibuffer. (This is the last file name those commands read.)
2695 Then exiting from Emerge saves the merged text in the output file.
2696
2697 Normally, Emerge commands save the output buffer in its file when you
2698 exit. If you abort Emerge with @kbd{C-]}, the Emerge command does not
2699 save the output buffer, but you can save it yourself if you wish.
2700
2701 @node Submodes of Emerge
2702 @subsection Submodes of Emerge
2703
2704 You can choose between two modes for giving merge commands: Fast mode
2705 and Edit mode. In Fast mode, basic merge commands are single
2706 characters, but ordinary Emacs commands are disabled. This is
2707 convenient if you use only merge commands. In Edit mode, all merge
2708 commands start with the prefix key @kbd{C-c C-c}, and the normal Emacs
2709 commands are also available. This allows editing the merge buffer, but
2710 slows down Emerge operations.
2711
2712 Use @kbd{e} to switch to Edit mode, and @kbd{C-c C-c f} to switch to
2713 Fast mode. The mode line indicates Edit and Fast modes with @samp{E}
2714 and @samp{F}.
2715
2716 Emerge has two additional submodes that affect how particular merge
2717 commands work: Auto Advance mode and Skip Prefers mode.
2718
2719 If Auto Advance mode is in effect, the @kbd{a} and @kbd{b} commands
2720 advance to the next difference. This lets you go through the merge
2721 faster as long as you simply choose one of the alternatives from the
2722 input. The mode line indicates Auto Advance mode with @samp{A}.
2723
2724 If Skip Prefers mode is in effect, the @kbd{n} and @kbd{p} commands
2725 skip over differences in states prefer-A and prefer-B (@pxref{State of
2726 Difference}). Thus you see only differences for which neither version
2727 is presumed ``correct.'' The mode line indicates Skip Prefers mode with
2728 @samp{S}.
2729
2730 @findex emerge-auto-advance-mode
2731 @findex emerge-skip-prefers-mode
2732 Use the command @kbd{s a} (@code{emerge-auto-advance-mode}) to set or
2733 clear Auto Advance mode. Use @kbd{s s}
2734 (@code{emerge-skip-prefers-mode}) to set or clear Skip Prefers mode.
2735 These commands turn on the mode with a positive argument, turns it off
2736 with a negative or zero argument, and toggle the mode with no argument.
2737
2738 @node State of Difference
2739 @subsection State of a Difference
2740
2741 In the merge buffer, a difference is marked with lines of @samp{v} and
2742 @samp{^} characters. Each difference has one of these seven states:
2743
2744 @table @asis
2745 @item A
2746 The difference is showing the A version. The @kbd{a} command always
2747 produces this state; the mode line indicates it with @samp{A}.
2748
2749 @item B
2750 The difference is showing the B version. The @kbd{b} command always
2751 produces this state; the mode line indicates it with @samp{B}.
2752
2753 @item default-A
2754 @itemx default-B
2755 The difference is showing the A or the B state by default, because you
2756 haven't made a choice. All differences start in the default-A state
2757 (and thus the merge buffer is a copy of the A buffer), except those for
2758 which one alternative is ``preferred'' (see below).
2759
2760 When you select a difference, its state changes from default-A or
2761 default-B to plain A or B. Thus, the selected difference never has
2762 state default-A or default-B, and these states are never displayed in
2763 the mode line.
2764
2765 The command @kbd{d a} chooses default-A as the default state, and @kbd{d
2766 b} chooses default-B. This chosen default applies to all differences
2767 which you haven't ever selected and for which no alternative is preferred.
2768 If you are moving through the merge sequentially, the differences you
2769 haven't selected are those following the selected one. Thus, while
2770 moving sequentially, you can effectively make the A version the default
2771 for some sections of the merge buffer and the B version the default for
2772 others by using @kbd{d a} and @kbd{d b} between sections.
2773
2774 @item prefer-A
2775 @itemx prefer-B
2776 The difference is showing the A or B state because it is
2777 @dfn{preferred}. This means that you haven't made an explicit choice,
2778 but one alternative seems likely to be right because the other
2779 alternative agrees with the common ancestor. Thus, where the A buffer
2780 agrees with the common ancestor, the B version is preferred, because
2781 chances are it is the one that was actually changed.
2782
2783 These two states are displayed in the mode line as @samp{A*} and @samp{B*}.
2784
2785 @item combined
2786 The difference is showing a combination of the A and B states, as a
2787 result of the @kbd{x c} or @kbd{x C} commands.
2788
2789 Once a difference is in this state, the @kbd{a} and @kbd{b} commands
2790 don't do anything to it unless you give them a numeric argument.
2791
2792 The mode line displays this state as @samp{comb}.
2793 @end table
2794
2795 @node Merge Commands
2796 @subsection Merge Commands
2797
2798 Here are the Merge commands for Fast mode; in Edit mode, precede them
2799 with @kbd{C-c C-c}:
2800
2801 @table @kbd
2802 @item p
2803 Select the previous difference.
2804
2805 @item n
2806 Select the next difference.
2807
2808 @item a
2809 Choose the A version of this difference.
2810
2811 @item b
2812 Choose the B version of this difference.
2813
2814 @item C-u @var{n} j
2815 Select difference number @var{n}.
2816
2817 @item .
2818 Select the difference containing point. You can use this command in the
2819 merge buffer or in the A or B buffer.
2820
2821 @item q
2822 Quit---finish the merge.
2823
2824 @item C-]
2825 Abort---exit merging and do not save the output.
2826
2827 @item f
2828 Go into Fast mode. (In Edit mode, this is actually @kbd{C-c C-c f}.)
2829
2830 @item e
2831 Go into Edit mode.
2832
2833 @item l
2834 Recenter (like @kbd{C-l}) all three windows.
2835
2836 @item -
2837 Specify part of a prefix numeric argument.
2838
2839 @item @var{digit}
2840 Also specify part of a prefix numeric argument.
2841
2842 @item d a
2843 Choose the A version as the default from here down in
2844 the merge buffer.
2845
2846 @item d b
2847 Choose the B version as the default from here down in
2848 the merge buffer.
2849
2850 @item c a
2851 Copy the A version of this difference into the kill ring.
2852
2853 @item c b
2854 Copy the B version of this difference into the kill ring.
2855
2856 @item i a
2857 Insert the A version of this difference at point.
2858
2859 @item i b
2860 Insert the B version of this difference at point.
2861
2862 @item m
2863 Put point and mark around the difference.
2864
2865 @item ^
2866 Scroll all three windows down (like @kbd{M-v}).
2867
2868 @item v
2869 Scroll all three windows up (like @kbd{C-v}).
2870
2871 @item <
2872 Scroll all three windows left (like @kbd{C-x <}).
2873
2874 @item >
2875 Scroll all three windows right (like @kbd{C-x >}).
2876
2877 @item |
2878 Reset horizontal scroll on all three windows.
2879
2880 @item x 1
2881 Shrink the merge window to one line. (Use @kbd{C-u l} to restore it
2882 to full size.)
2883
2884 @item x c
2885 Combine the two versions of this difference (@pxref{Combining in
2886 Emerge}).
2887
2888 @item x f
2889 Show the names of the files/buffers Emerge is operating on, in a Help
2890 window. (Use @kbd{C-u l} to restore windows.)
2891
2892 @item x j
2893 Join this difference with the following one.
2894 (@kbd{C-u x j} joins this difference with the previous one.)
2895
2896 @item x s
2897 Split this difference into two differences. Before you use this
2898 command, position point in each of the three buffers at the place where
2899 you want to split the difference.
2900
2901 @item x t
2902 Trim identical lines off the top and bottom of the difference.
2903 Such lines occur when the A and B versions are
2904 identical but differ from the ancestor version.
2905 @end table
2906
2907 @node Exiting Emerge
2908 @subsection Exiting Emerge
2909
2910 The @kbd{q} command (@code{emerge-quit}) finishes the merge, storing
2911 the results into the output file if you specified one. It restores the
2912 A and B buffers to their proper contents, or kills them if they were
2913 created by Emerge and you haven't changed them. It also disables the
2914 Emerge commands in the merge buffer, since executing them later could
2915 damage the contents of the various buffers.
2916
2917 @kbd{C-]} aborts the merge. This means exiting without writing the
2918 output file. If you didn't specify an output file, then there is no
2919 real difference between aborting and finishing the merge.
2920
2921 If the Emerge command was called from another Lisp program, then its
2922 return value is @code{t} for successful completion, or @code{nil} if you
2923 abort.
2924
2925 @node Combining in Emerge
2926 @subsection Combining the Two Versions
2927
2928 Sometimes you want to keep @emph{both} alternatives for a particular
2929 difference. To do this, use @kbd{x c}, which edits the merge buffer
2930 like this:
2931
2932 @example
2933 @group
2934 #ifdef NEW
2935 @var{version from A buffer}
2936 #else /* not NEW */
2937 @var{version from B buffer}
2938 #endif /* not NEW */
2939 @end group
2940 @end example
2941
2942 @noindent
2943 @vindex emerge-combine-versions-template
2944 While this example shows C preprocessor conditionals delimiting the two
2945 alternative versions, you can specify the strings to use by setting
2946 the variable @code{emerge-combine-versions-template} to a string of your
2947 choice. In the string, @samp{%a} says where to put version A, and
2948 @samp{%b} says where to put version B. The default setting, which
2949 produces the results shown above, looks like this:
2950
2951 @example
2952 @group
2953 "#ifdef NEW\n%a#else /* not NEW */\n%b#endif /* not NEW */\n"
2954 @end group
2955 @end example
2956
2957 @node Fine Points of Emerge
2958 @subsection Fine Points of Emerge
2959
2960 During the merge, you mustn't try to edit the A and B buffers yourself.
2961 Emerge modifies them temporarily, but ultimately puts them back the way
2962 they were.
2963
2964 You can have any number of merges going at once---just don't use any one
2965 buffer as input to more than one merge at once, since the temporary
2966 changes made in these buffers would get in each other's way.
2967
2968 Starting Emerge can take a long time because it needs to compare the
2969 files fully. Emacs can't do anything else until @code{diff} finishes.
2970 Perhaps in the future someone will change Emerge to do the comparison in
2971 the background when the input files are large---then you could keep on
2972 doing other things with Emacs until Emerge is ready to accept
2973 commands.
2974
2975 @vindex emerge-startup-hook
2976 After setting up the merge, Emerge runs the hook
2977 @code{emerge-startup-hook} (@pxref{Hooks}).
2978
2979 @node C Modes
2980 @section C and Related Modes
2981 @cindex C mode
2982 @cindex Java mode
2983 @cindex Pike mode
2984 @cindex IDL mode
2985 @cindex CORBA IDL mode
2986 @cindex Objective C mode
2987 @cindex C++ mode
2988 @cindex mode, Java
2989 @cindex mode, C
2990 @cindex mode, Objective C
2991 @cindex mode, CORBA IDL
2992 @cindex mode, Pike
2993
2994 This section gives a brief description of the special features
2995 available in C, C++, Objective-C, Java, CORBA IDL, and Pike modes.
2996 (These are called ``C mode and related modes.'') @xref{Top, CC Mode,
2997 ccmode, , CC Mode}, for a more extensive description of these modes
2998 and their special features.
2999
3000 @menu
3001 * Motion in C::
3002 * Electric C::
3003 * Hungry Delete::
3004 * Other C Commands::
3005 * Comments in C::
3006 @end menu
3007
3008 @node Motion in C
3009 @subsection C Mode Motion Commands
3010
3011 This section describes commands for moving point, in C mode and
3012 related modes.
3013
3014 @table @code
3015 @item C-c C-u
3016 @kindex C-c C-u @r{(C mode)}
3017 @findex c-up-conditional
3018 Move point back to the containing preprocessor conditional, leaving the
3019 mark behind. A prefix argument acts as a repeat count. With a negative
3020 argument, move point forward to the end of the containing
3021 preprocessor conditional. When going backwards, @code{#elif} is treated
3022 like @code{#else} followed by @code{#if}. When going forwards,
3023 @code{#elif} is ignored.@refill
3024
3025 @item C-c C-p
3026 @kindex C-c C-p @r{(C mode)}
3027 @findex c-backward-conditional
3028 Move point back over a preprocessor conditional, leaving the mark
3029 behind. A prefix argument acts as a repeat count. With a negative
3030 argument, move forward.
3031
3032 @item C-c C-n
3033 @kindex C-c C-n @r{(C mode)}
3034 @findex c-forward-conditional
3035 Move point forward across a preprocessor conditional, leaving the mark
3036 behind. A prefix argument acts as a repeat count. With a negative
3037 argument, move backward.
3038
3039 @item M-a
3040 @kindex ESC a
3041 @findex c-beginning-of-statement
3042 Move point to the beginning of the innermost C statement
3043 (@code{c-beginning-of-statement}). If point is already at the beginning
3044 of a statement, move to the beginning of the preceding statement. With
3045 prefix argument @var{n}, move back @var{n} @minus{} 1 statements.
3046
3047 If point is within a string or comment, or next to a comment (only
3048 whitespace between them), this command moves by sentences instead of
3049 statements.
3050
3051 When called from a program, this function takes three optional
3052 arguments: the numeric prefix argument, a buffer position limit
3053 (don't move back before that place), and a flag that controls whether
3054 to do sentence motion when inside of a comment.
3055
3056 @item M-e
3057 @kindex ESC e
3058 @findex c-end-of-statement
3059 Move point to the end of the innermost C statement; like @kbd{M-a}
3060 except that it moves in the other direction (@code{c-end-of-statement}).
3061
3062 @item M-x c-backward-into-nomenclature
3063 @findex c-backward-into-nomenclature
3064 Move point backward to beginning of a C++ nomenclature section or word.
3065 With prefix argument @var{n}, move @var{n} times. If @var{n} is
3066 negative, move forward. C++ nomenclature means a symbol name in the
3067 style of NamingSymbolsWithMixedCaseAndNoUnderlines; each capital letter
3068 begins a section or word.
3069
3070 In the GNU project, we recommend using underscores to separate words
3071 within an identifier in C or C++, rather than using case distinctions.
3072
3073 @item M-x c-forward-into-nomenclature
3074 @findex c-forward-into-nomenclature
3075 Move point forward to end of a C++ nomenclature section or word.
3076 With prefix argument @var{n}, move @var{n} times.
3077 @end table
3078
3079 @node Electric C
3080 @subsection Electric C Characters
3081
3082 In C mode and related modes, certain printing characters are
3083 ``electric''---in addition to inserting themselves, they also reindent
3084 the current line and may insert newlines. This feature is controlled by
3085 the variable @code{c-auto-newline}. The ``electric'' characters are
3086 @kbd{@{}, @kbd{@}}, @kbd{:}, @kbd{#}, @kbd{;}, @kbd{,}, @kbd{<},
3087 @kbd{>}, @kbd{/}, @kbd{*}, @kbd{(}, and @kbd{)}.
3088
3089 Electric characters insert newlines only when the @dfn{auto-newline}
3090 feature is enabled (indicated by @samp{/a} in the mode line after the
3091 mode name). This feature is controlled by the variable
3092 @code{c-auto-newline}. You can turn this feature on or off with the
3093 command @kbd{C-c C-a}:
3094
3095 @table @kbd
3096 @item C-c C-a
3097 @kindex C-c C-a @r{(C mode)}
3098 @findex c-toggle-auto-state
3099 Toggle the auto-newline feature (@code{c-toggle-auto-state}). With a
3100 prefix argument, this command turns the auto-newline feature on if the
3101 argument is positive, and off if it is negative.
3102 @end table
3103
3104 The colon character is electric because that is appropriate for a
3105 single colon. But when you want to insert a double colon in C++, the
3106 electric behavior of colon is inconvenient. You can insert a double
3107 colon with no reindentation or newlines by typing @kbd{C-c :}:
3108
3109 @table @kbd
3110 @item C-c :
3111 @kindex C-c : @r{(C mode)}
3112 @findex c-scope-operator
3113 Insert a double colon scope operator at point, without reindenting the
3114 line or adding any newlines (@code{c-scope-operator}).
3115 @end table
3116
3117 The electric @kbd{#} key reindents the line if it appears to be the
3118 beginning of a preprocessor directive. This happens when the value of
3119 @code{c-electric-pound-behavior} is @code{(alignleft)}. You can turn
3120 this feature off by setting @code{c-electric-pound-behavior} to
3121 @code{nil}.
3122
3123 The variable @code{c-hanging-braces-alist} controls the insertion of
3124 newlines before and after inserted braces. It is an association list
3125 with elements of the following form: @code{(@var{syntactic-symbol}
3126 . @var{nl-list})}. Most of the syntactic symbols that appear in
3127 @code{c-offsets-alist} are meaningful here as well.
3128
3129 The list @var{nl-list} may contain either of the symbols
3130 @code{before} or @code{after}, or both; or it may be @code{nil}. When a
3131 brace is inserted, the syntactic context it defines is looked up in
3132 @code{c-hanging-braces-alist}; if it is found, the @var{nl-list} is used
3133 to determine where newlines are inserted: either before the brace,
3134 after, or both. If not found, the default is to insert a newline both
3135 before and after braces.
3136
3137 The variable @code{c-hanging-colons-alist} controls the insertion of
3138 newlines before and after inserted colons. It is an association list
3139 with elements of the following form: @code{(@var{syntactic-symbol}
3140 . @var{nl-list})}. The list @var{nl-list} may contain either of the
3141 symbols @code{before} or @code{after}, or both; or it may be @code{nil}.
3142
3143 When a colon is inserted, the syntactic symbol it defines is looked
3144 up in this list, and if found, the @var{nl-list} is used to determine
3145 where newlines are inserted: either before the brace, after, or both.
3146 If the syntactic symbol is not found in this list, no newlines are
3147 inserted.
3148
3149 Electric characters can also delete newlines automatically when the
3150 auto-newline feature is enabled. This feature makes auto-newline more
3151 acceptable, by deleting the newlines in the most common cases where you
3152 do not want them. Emacs can recognize several cases in which deleting a
3153 newline might be desirable; by setting the variable
3154 @code{c-cleanup-list}, you can specify @emph{which} of these cases that
3155 should happen. The variable's value is a list of symbols, each
3156 describing one case for possible deletion of a newline. Here are the
3157 meaningful symbols, and their meanings:
3158
3159 @table @code
3160 @item brace-catch-brace
3161 Clean up @samp{@} catch (@var{condition}) @{} constructs by placing the
3162 entire construct on a single line. The clean-up occurs when you type
3163 the @samp{@{}, if there is nothing between the braces aside from
3164 @code{catch} and @var{condition}.
3165
3166 @item brace-else-brace
3167 Clean up @samp{@} else @{} constructs by placing the entire construct on
3168 a single line. The clean-up occurs when you type the @samp{@{} after
3169 the @code{else}, but only if there is nothing but white space between
3170 the braces and the @code{else}.
3171
3172 @item brace-elseif-brace
3173 Clean up @samp{@} else if (@dots{}) @{} constructs by placing the entire
3174 construct on a single line. The clean-up occurs when you type the
3175 @samp{@{}, if there is nothing but white space between the @samp{@}} and
3176 @samp{@{} aside from the keywords and the @code{if}-condition.
3177
3178 @item empty-defun-braces
3179 Clean up empty defun braces by placing the braces on the same
3180 line. Clean-up occurs when you type the closing brace.
3181
3182 @item defun-close-semi
3183 Clean up the semicolon after a @code{struct} or similar type
3184 declaration, by placing the semicolon on the same line as the closing
3185 brace. Clean-up occurs when you type the semicolon.
3186
3187 @item list-close-comma
3188 Clean up commas following braces in array and aggregate
3189 initializers. Clean-up occurs when you type the comma.
3190
3191 @item scope-operator
3192 Clean up double colons which may designate a C++ scope operator, by
3193 placing the colons together. Clean-up occurs when you type the second
3194 colon, but only when the two colons are separated by nothing but
3195 whitespace.
3196 @end table
3197
3198 @node Hungry Delete
3199 @subsection Hungry Delete Feature in C
3200
3201 When the @dfn{hungry-delete} feature is enabled (indicated by
3202 @samp{/h} or @samp{/ah} in the mode line after the mode name), a single
3203 @key{DEL} command deletes all preceding whitespace, not just one space.
3204 To turn this feature on or off, use @kbd{C-c C-d}:
3205
3206 @table @kbd
3207 @item C-c C-d
3208 @kindex C-c C-d @r{(C mode)}
3209 @findex c-toggle-hungry-state
3210 Toggle the hungry-delete feature (@code{c-toggle-hungry-state}). With a
3211 prefix argument, this command turns the hungry-delete feature on if the
3212 argument is positive, and off if it is negative.
3213
3214 @item C-c C-t
3215 @kindex C-c C-t @r{(C mode)}
3216 @findex c-toggle-auto-hungry-state
3217 Toggle the auto-newline and hungry-delete features, both at once
3218 (@code{c-toggle-auto-hungry-state}).
3219 @end table
3220
3221 @vindex c-hungry-delete-key
3222 The variable @code{c-hungry-delete-key} controls whether the
3223 hungry-delete feature is enabled.
3224
3225 @node Other C Commands
3226 @subsection Other Commands for C Mode
3227
3228 @table @kbd
3229 @item C-M-h
3230 Put mark at the end of a function definition, and put point at the
3231 beginning (@code{c-mark-function}).
3232
3233 @item M-q
3234 @kindex M-q @r{(C mode)}
3235 @findex c-fill-paragraph
3236 Fill a paragraph, handling C and C++ comments (@code{c-fill-paragraph}).
3237 If any part of the current line is a comment or within a comment, this
3238 command fills the comment or the paragraph of it that point is in,
3239 preserving the comment indentation and comment delimiters.
3240
3241 @item C-c C-e
3242 @cindex macro expansion in C
3243 @cindex expansion of C macros
3244 @findex c-macro-expand
3245 @kindex C-c C-e @r{(C mode)}
3246 Run the C preprocessor on the text in the region, and show the result,
3247 which includes the expansion of all the macro calls
3248 (@code{c-macro-expand}). The buffer text before the region is also
3249 included in preprocessing, for the sake of macros defined there, but the
3250 output from this part isn't shown.
3251
3252 When you are debugging C code that uses macros, sometimes it is hard to
3253 figure out precisely how the macros expand. With this command, you
3254 don't have to figure it out; you can see the expansions.
3255
3256 @item C-c C-\
3257 @findex c-backslash-region
3258 @kindex C-c C-\ @r{(C mode)}
3259 Insert or align @samp{\} characters at the ends of the lines of the
3260 region (@code{c-backslash-region}). This is useful after writing or
3261 editing a C macro definition.
3262
3263 If a line already ends in @samp{\}, this command adjusts the amount of
3264 whitespace before it. Otherwise, it inserts a new @samp{\}. However,
3265 the last line in the region is treated specially; no @samp{\} is
3266 inserted on that line, and any @samp{\} there is deleted.
3267
3268 @item M-x cpp-highlight-buffer
3269 @cindex preprocessor highlighting
3270 @findex cpp-highlight-buffer
3271 Highlight parts of the text according to its preprocessor conditionals.
3272 This command displays another buffer named @samp{*CPP Edit*}, which
3273 serves as a graphic menu for selecting how to display particular kinds
3274 of conditionals and their contents. After changing various settings,
3275 click on @samp{[A]pply these settings} (or go to that buffer and type
3276 @kbd{a}) to rehighlight the C mode buffer accordingly.
3277
3278 @item C-c C-s
3279 @findex c-show-syntactic-information
3280 @kindex C-c C-s @r{(C mode)}
3281 Display the syntactic information about the current source line
3282 (@code{c-show-syntactic-information}). This is the information that
3283 directs how the line is indented.
3284
3285 @item M-x cwarn-mode
3286 @itemx M-x global-cwarn-mode
3287 @findex cwarn-mode
3288 @findex global-cwarn-mode
3289 @cindex CWarn mode
3290 @cindex suspicious constructions in C, C++
3291 CWarn minor mode highlights certain suspicious C and C++ constructions:
3292
3293 @itemize @bullet{}
3294 @item
3295 Assignments inside expressions.
3296 @item
3297 Semicolon following immediately after @samp{if}, @samp{for}, and @samp{while}
3298 (except after a @samp{do @dots{} while} statement);
3299 @item
3300 C++ functions with reference parameters.
3301 @end itemize
3302
3303 @noindent
3304 You can enable the mode for one buffer with the command @kbd{M-x
3305 cwarn-mode}, or for all suitable buffers with the command @kbd{M-x
3306 global-cwarn-mode} or by customizing the variable
3307 @code{global-cwarn-mode}. You must also enable Font Lock mode to make
3308 it work.
3309
3310 @item M-x hide-ifdef-mode
3311 @findex hide-ifdef-mode
3312 @cindex Hide-ifdef mode
3313 Hide-ifdef minor mode hides selected code within @samp{#if} and
3314 @samp{#ifdef} preprocessor blocks. See the documentation string of
3315 @code{hide-ifdef-mode} for more information.
3316
3317 @item M-x ff-find-related-file
3318 @cindex related files
3319 @findex ff-find-related-file
3320 @vindex ff-related-file-alist
3321 Find a file ``related'' in a special way to the file visited by the
3322 current buffer. Typically this will be the header file corresponding
3323 to a C/C++ source file, or vice versa. The variable
3324 @code{ff-related-file-alist} specifies how to compute related file
3325 names.
3326 @end table
3327
3328 @node Comments in C
3329 @subsection Comments in C Modes
3330
3331 C mode and related modes use a number of variables for controlling
3332 comment format.
3333
3334 @table @code
3335 @item c-comment-only-line-offset
3336 @vindex c-comment-only-line-offset
3337 Extra offset for line which contains only the start of a comment. It
3338 can be either an integer or a cons cell of the form
3339 @code{(@var{non-anchored-offset} . @var{anchored-offset})}, where
3340 @var{non-anchored-offset} is the amount of offset given to
3341 non-column-zero anchored comment-only lines, and @var{anchored-offset}
3342 is the amount of offset to give column-zero anchored comment-only lines.
3343 Just an integer as value is equivalent to @code{(@var{val} . 0)}.
3344
3345 @item c-comment-start-regexp
3346 @vindex c-comment-start-regexp
3347 This buffer-local variable specifies how to recognize the start of a comment.
3348
3349 @item c-hanging-comment-ender-p
3350 @vindex c-hanging-comment-ender-p
3351 If this variable is @code{nil}, @code{c-fill-paragraph} leaves the
3352 comment terminator of a block comment on a line by itself. The default
3353 value is @code{t}, which puts the comment-end delimiter @samp{*/} at the
3354 end of the last line of the comment text.
3355
3356 @item c-hanging-comment-starter-p
3357 @vindex c-hanging-comment-starter-p
3358 If this variable is @code{nil}, @code{c-fill-paragraph} leaves the
3359 starting delimiter of a block comment on a line by itself. The default
3360 value is @code{t}, which puts the comment-start delimiter @samp{/*} at
3361 the beginning of the first line of the comment text.
3362 @end table
3363
3364 @node Fortran
3365 @section Fortran Mode
3366 @cindex Fortran mode
3367 @cindex mode, Fortran
3368
3369 Fortran mode provides special motion commands for Fortran statements and
3370 subprograms, and indentation commands that understand Fortran conventions
3371 of nesting, line numbers and continuation statements. Fortran mode has
3372 its own Auto Fill mode that breaks long lines into proper Fortran
3373 continuation lines.
3374
3375 Special commands for comments are provided because Fortran comments
3376 are unlike those of other languages. Built-in abbrevs optionally save
3377 typing when you insert Fortran keywords.
3378
3379 Use @kbd{M-x fortran-mode} to switch to this major mode. This command
3380 runs the hook @code{fortran-mode-hook} (@pxref{Hooks}).
3381
3382 @cindex Fortran77 and Fortran90
3383 @findex f90-mode
3384 @findex fortran-mode
3385 Fortan mode is meant for editing Fortran77 ``fixed format'' source
3386 code. For editing the modern Fortran90 ``free format'' source code,
3387 use F90 mode (@code{f90-mode}). Emacs normally uses Fortran mode for
3388 files with extension @samp{.f}, @samp{.F} or @samp{.for}, and F90 mode
3389 for the extension @samp{.f90}. GNU Fortran supports both kinds of
3390 format.
3391
3392 @menu
3393 * Motion: Fortran Motion. Moving point by statements or subprograms.
3394 * Indent: Fortran Indent. Indentation commands for Fortran.
3395 * Comments: Fortran Comments. Inserting and aligning comments.
3396 * Autofill: Fortran Autofill. Auto fill minor mode for Fortran.
3397 * Columns: Fortran Columns. Measuring columns for valid Fortran.
3398 * Abbrev: Fortran Abbrev. Built-in abbrevs for Fortran keywords.
3399 @end menu
3400
3401 @node Fortran Motion
3402 @subsection Motion Commands
3403
3404 In addition to the normal commands for moving by and operating on
3405 ``defuns'' (Fortran subprograms---functions and subroutines), Fortran
3406 mode provides special commands to move by statements.
3407
3408 @table @kbd
3409 @kindex C-c C-n @r{(Fortran mode)}
3410 @findex fortran-next-statement
3411 @item C-c C-n
3412 Move to beginning of current or next statement
3413 (@code{fortran-next-statement}).
3414
3415 @kindex C-c C-p @r{(Fortran mode)}
3416 @findex fortran-previous-statement
3417 @item C-c C-p
3418 Move to beginning of current or previous statement
3419 (@code{fortran-previous-statement}).
3420 @end table
3421
3422 @node Fortran Indent
3423 @subsection Fortran Indentation
3424
3425 Special commands and features are needed for indenting Fortran code in
3426 order to make sure various syntactic entities (line numbers, comment line
3427 indicators and continuation line flags) appear in the columns that are
3428 required for standard Fortran.
3429
3430 @menu
3431 * Commands: ForIndent Commands. Commands for indenting and filling Fortran.
3432 * Contline: ForIndent Cont. How continuation lines indent.
3433 * Numbers: ForIndent Num. How line numbers auto-indent.
3434 * Conv: ForIndent Conv. Conventions you must obey to avoid trouble.
3435 * Vars: ForIndent Vars. Variables controlling Fortran indent style.
3436 @end menu
3437
3438 @node ForIndent Commands
3439 @subsubsection Fortran Indentation and Filling Commands
3440
3441 @table @kbd
3442 @item C-M-j
3443 Break the current line and set up a continuation line
3444 (@code{fortran-split-line}).
3445 @item M-^
3446 Join this line to the previous line (@code{fortran-join-line}).
3447 @item C-M-q
3448 Indent all the lines of the subprogram point is in
3449 (@code{fortran-indent-subprogram}).
3450 @item M-q
3451 Fill a comment block or statement.
3452 @end table
3453
3454 @kindex C-M-q @r{(Fortran mode)}
3455 @findex fortran-indent-subprogram
3456 The key @kbd{C-M-q} runs @code{fortran-indent-subprogram}, a command
3457 to reindent all the lines of the Fortran subprogram (function or
3458 subroutine) containing point.
3459
3460 @kindex C-M-j @r{(Fortran mode)}
3461 @findex fortran-split-line
3462 The key @kbd{C-M-j} runs @code{fortran-split-line}, which splits
3463 a line in the appropriate fashion for Fortran. In a non-comment line,
3464 the second half becomes a continuation line and is indented
3465 accordingly. In a comment line, both halves become separate comment
3466 lines.
3467
3468 @kindex M-^ @r{(Fortran mode)}
3469 @kindex C-c C-d @r{(Fortran mode)}
3470 @findex fortran-join-line
3471 @kbd{M-^} or @kbd{C-c C-d} runs the command @code{fortran-join-line},
3472 which joins a continuation line back to the previous line, roughly as
3473 the inverse of @code{fortran-split-line}. The point must be on a
3474 continuation line when this command is invoked.
3475
3476 @kindex M-q @r{(Fortran mode)}
3477 @kbd{M-q} in Fortran mode fills the comment block or statement that
3478 point is in. This removes any excess statement continuations.
3479
3480 @node ForIndent Cont
3481 @subsubsection Continuation Lines
3482 @cindex Fortran continuation lines
3483
3484 @vindex fortran-continuation-string
3485 Most modern Fortran compilers allow two ways of writing continuation
3486 lines. If the first non-space character on a line is in column 5, then
3487 that line is a continuation of the previous line. We call this
3488 @dfn{fixed format}. (In GNU Emacs we always count columns from 0.) The
3489 variable @code{fortran-continuation-string} specifies what character to
3490 put on column 5. A line that starts with a tab character followed by
3491 any digit except @samp{0} is also a continuation line. We call this
3492 style of continuation @dfn{tab format}.
3493
3494 @vindex indent-tabs-mode @r{(Fortran mode)}
3495 Fortran mode can make either style of continuation line, but you
3496 must specify which one you prefer. The value of the variable
3497 @code{indent-tabs-mode} controls the choice: @code{nil} for fixed
3498 format, and non-@code{nil} for tab format. You can tell which style
3499 is presently in effect by the presence or absence of the string
3500 @samp{Tab} in the mode line.
3501
3502 If the text on a line starts with the conventional Fortran
3503 continuation marker @samp{$}, or if it begins with any non-whitespace
3504 character in column 5, Fortran mode treats it as a continuation line.
3505 When you indent a continuation line with @key{TAB}, it converts the line
3506 to the current continuation style. When you split a Fortran statement
3507 with @kbd{C-M-j}, the continuation marker on the newline is created
3508 according to the continuation style.
3509
3510 The setting of continuation style affects several other aspects of
3511 editing in Fortran mode. In fixed format mode, the minimum column
3512 number for the body of a statement is 6. Lines inside of Fortran
3513 blocks that are indented to larger column numbers always use only the
3514 space character for whitespace. In tab format mode, the minimum
3515 column number for the statement body is 8, and the whitespace before
3516 column 8 must always consist of one tab character.
3517
3518 @vindex fortran-tab-mode-default
3519 @vindex fortran-analyze-depth
3520 When you enter Fortran mode for an existing file, it tries to deduce the
3521 proper continuation style automatically from the file contents. The first
3522 line that begins with either a tab character or six spaces determines the
3523 choice. The variable @code{fortran-analyze-depth} specifies how many lines
3524 to consider (at the beginning of the file); if none of those lines
3525 indicates a style, then the variable @code{fortran-tab-mode-default}
3526 specifies the style. If it is @code{nil}, that specifies fixed format, and
3527 non-@code{nil} specifies tab format.
3528
3529 @node ForIndent Num
3530 @subsubsection Line Numbers
3531
3532 If a number is the first non-whitespace in the line, Fortran
3533 indentation assumes it is a line number and moves it to columns 0
3534 through 4. (Columns always count from 0 in GNU Emacs.)
3535
3536 @vindex fortran-line-number-indent
3537 Line numbers of four digits or less are normally indented one space.
3538 The variable @code{fortran-line-number-indent} controls this; it
3539 specifies the maximum indentation a line number can have. Line numbers
3540 are indented to right-justify them to end in column 4 unless that would
3541 require more than this maximum indentation. The default value of the
3542 variable is 1.
3543
3544 @vindex fortran-electric-line-number
3545 Simply inserting a line number is enough to indent it according to
3546 these rules. As each digit is inserted, the indentation is recomputed.
3547 To turn off this feature, set the variable
3548 @code{fortran-electric-line-number} to @code{nil}. Then inserting line
3549 numbers is like inserting anything else.
3550
3551 @node ForIndent Conv
3552 @subsubsection Syntactic Conventions
3553
3554 Fortran mode assumes that you follow certain conventions that simplify
3555 the task of understanding a Fortran program well enough to indent it
3556 properly:
3557
3558 @itemize @bullet
3559 @item
3560 Two nested @samp{do} loops never share a @samp{continue} statement.
3561
3562 @item
3563 Fortran keywords such as @samp{if}, @samp{else}, @samp{then}, @samp{do}
3564 and others are written without embedded whitespace or line breaks.
3565
3566 Fortran compilers generally ignore whitespace outside of string
3567 constants, but Fortran mode does not recognize these keywords if they
3568 are not contiguous. Constructs such as @samp{else if} or @samp{end do}
3569 are acceptable, but the second word should be on the same line as the
3570 first and not on a continuation line.
3571 @end itemize
3572
3573 @noindent
3574 If you fail to follow these conventions, the indentation commands may
3575 indent some lines unaesthetically. However, a correct Fortran program
3576 retains its meaning when reindented even if the conventions are not
3577 followed.
3578
3579 @node ForIndent Vars
3580 @subsubsection Variables for Fortran Indentation
3581
3582 @vindex fortran-do-indent
3583 @vindex fortran-if-indent
3584 @vindex fortran-structure-indent
3585 @vindex fortran-continuation-indent
3586 @vindex fortran-check-all-num@dots{}
3587 @vindex fortran-minimum-statement-indent@dots{}
3588 Several additional variables control how Fortran indentation works:
3589
3590 @table @code
3591 @item fortran-do-indent
3592 Extra indentation within each level of @samp{do} statement (default 3).
3593
3594 @item fortran-if-indent
3595 Extra indentation within each level of @samp{if} statement (default 3).
3596 This value is also used for extra indentation within each level of the
3597 Fortran 90 @samp{where} statement.
3598
3599 @item fortran-structure-indent
3600 Extra indentation within each level of @samp{structure}, @samp{union}, or
3601 @samp{map} statements (default 3).
3602
3603 @item fortran-continuation-indent
3604 Extra indentation for bodies of continuation lines (default 5).
3605
3606 @item fortran-check-all-num-for-matching-do
3607 If this is @code{nil}, indentation assumes that each @samp{do} statement
3608 ends on a @samp{continue} statement. Therefore, when computing
3609 indentation for a statement other than @samp{continue}, it can save time
3610 by not checking for a @samp{do} statement ending there. If this is
3611 non-@code{nil}, indenting any numbered statement must check for a
3612 @samp{do} that ends there. The default is @code{nil}.
3613
3614 @item fortran-blink-matching-if
3615 If this is @code{t}, indenting an @samp{endif} statement moves the
3616 cursor momentarily to the matching @samp{if} statement to show where it
3617 is. The default is @code{nil}.
3618
3619 @item fortran-minimum-statement-indent-fixed
3620 Minimum indentation for fortran statements when using fixed format
3621 continuation line style. Statement bodies are never indented less than
3622 this much. The default is 6.
3623
3624 @item fortran-minimum-statement-indent-tab
3625 Minimum indentation for fortran statements for tab format continuation line
3626 style. Statement bodies are never indented less than this much. The
3627 default is 8.
3628 @end table
3629
3630 @node Fortran Comments
3631 @subsection Fortran Comments
3632
3633 The usual Emacs comment commands assume that a comment can follow a line
3634 of code. In Fortran, the standard comment syntax requires an entire line
3635 to be just a comment. Therefore, Fortran mode replaces the standard Emacs
3636 comment commands and defines some new variables.
3637
3638 Fortran mode can also handle the Fortran90 comment syntax where comments
3639 start with @samp{!} and can follow other text. Because only some Fortran77
3640 compilers accept this syntax, Fortran mode will not insert such comments
3641 unless you have said in advance to do so. To do this, set the variable
3642 @code{comment-start} to @samp{"!"} (@pxref{Variables}).
3643
3644 @table @kbd
3645 @item M-;
3646 Align comment or insert new comment (@code{fortran-comment-indent}).
3647
3648 @item C-x ;
3649 Applies to nonstandard @samp{!} comments only.
3650
3651 @item C-c ;
3652 Turn all lines of the region into comments, or (with argument) turn them back
3653 into real code (@code{fortran-comment-region}).
3654 @end table
3655
3656 @kbd{M-;} in Fortran mode is redefined as the command
3657 @code{fortran-comment-indent}. Like the usual @kbd{M-;} command, this
3658 recognizes any kind of existing comment and aligns its text appropriately;
3659 if there is no existing comment, a comment is inserted and aligned. But
3660 inserting and aligning comments are not the same in Fortran mode as in
3661 other modes.
3662
3663 When a new comment must be inserted, if the current line is blank, a
3664 full-line comment is inserted. On a non-blank line, a nonstandard @samp{!}
3665 comment is inserted if you have said you want to use them. Otherwise a
3666 full-line comment is inserted on a new line before the current line.
3667
3668 Nonstandard @samp{!} comments are aligned like comments in other
3669 languages, but full-line comments are different. In a standard full-line
3670 comment, the comment delimiter itself must always appear in column zero.
3671 What can be aligned is the text within the comment. You can choose from
3672 three styles of alignment by setting the variable
3673 @code{fortran-comment-indent-style} to one of these values:
3674
3675 @vindex fortran-comment-indent-style
3676 @vindex fortran-comment-line-extra-indent
3677 @table @code
3678 @item fixed
3679 Align the text at a fixed column, which is the sum of
3680 @code{fortran-comment-line-extra-indent} and the minimum statement
3681 indentation. This is the default.
3682
3683 The minimum statement indentation is
3684 @code{fortran-minimum-statement-indent-fixed} for fixed format
3685 continuation line style and @code{fortran-minimum-statement-indent-tab}
3686 for tab format style.
3687
3688 @item relative
3689 Align the text as if it were a line of code, but with an additional
3690 @code{fortran-comment-line-extra-indent} columns of indentation.
3691
3692 @item nil
3693 Don't move text in full-line comments automatically at all.
3694 @end table
3695
3696 @vindex fortran-comment-indent-char
3697 In addition, you can specify the character to be used to indent within
3698 full-line comments by setting the variable
3699 @code{fortran-comment-indent-char} to the single-character string you want
3700 to use.
3701
3702 @vindex comment-line-start
3703 @vindex comment-line-start-skip
3704 Fortran mode introduces two variables @code{comment-line-start} and
3705 @code{comment-line-start-skip}, which play for full-line comments the same
3706 roles played by @code{comment-start} and @code{comment-start-skip} for
3707 ordinary text-following comments. Normally these are set properly by
3708 Fortran mode, so you do not need to change them.
3709
3710 The normal Emacs comment command @kbd{C-x ;} has not been redefined. If
3711 you use @samp{!} comments, this command can be used with them. Otherwise
3712 it is useless in Fortran mode.
3713
3714 @kindex C-c ; @r{(Fortran mode)}
3715 @findex fortran-comment-region
3716 @vindex fortran-comment-region
3717 The command @kbd{C-c ;} (@code{fortran-comment-region}) turns all the
3718 lines of the region into comments by inserting the string @samp{C$$$} at
3719 the front of each one. With a numeric argument, it turns the region
3720 back into live code by deleting @samp{C$$$} from the front of each line
3721 in it. The string used for these comments can be controlled by setting
3722 the variable @code{fortran-comment-region}. Note that here we have an
3723 example of a command and a variable with the same name; these two uses
3724 of the name never conflict because in Lisp and in Emacs it is always
3725 clear from the context which one is meant.
3726
3727 @node Fortran Autofill
3728 @subsection Fortran Auto Fill Mode
3729
3730 Fortran Auto Fill mode is a minor mode which automatically splits
3731 Fortran statements as you insert them when they become too wide.
3732 Splitting a statement involves making continuation lines using
3733 @code{fortran-continuation-string} (@pxref{ForIndent Cont}). This
3734 splitting happens when you type @key{SPC}, @key{RET}, or @key{TAB}, and
3735 also in the Fortran indentation commands.
3736
3737 @findex fortran-auto-fill-mode
3738 @kbd{M-x fortran-auto-fill-mode} turns Fortran Auto Fill mode on if it
3739 was off, or off if it was on. This command works the same as @kbd{M-x
3740 auto-fill-mode} does for normal Auto Fill mode (@pxref{Filling}). A
3741 positive numeric argument turns Fortran Auto Fill mode on, and a
3742 negative argument turns it off. You can see when Fortran Auto Fill mode
3743 is in effect by the presence of the word @samp{Fill} in the mode line,
3744 inside the parentheses. Fortran Auto Fill mode is a minor mode, turned
3745 on or off for each buffer individually. @xref{Minor Modes}.
3746
3747 @vindex fortran-break-before-delimiters
3748 Fortran Auto Fill mode breaks lines at spaces or delimiters when the
3749 lines get longer than the desired width (the value of @code{fill-column}).
3750 The delimiters that Fortran Auto Fill mode may break at are @samp{,},
3751 @samp{'}, @samp{+}, @samp{-}, @samp{/}, @samp{*}, @samp{=}, and @samp{)}.
3752 The line break comes after the delimiter if the variable
3753 @code{fortran-break-before-delimiters} is @code{nil}. Otherwise (and by
3754 default), the break comes before the delimiter.
3755
3756 By default, Fortran Auto Fill mode is not enabled. If you want this
3757 feature turned on permanently, add a hook function to
3758 @code{fortran-mode-hook} to execute @code{(fortran-auto-fill-mode 1)}.
3759 @xref{Hooks}.
3760
3761 @node Fortran Columns
3762 @subsection Checking Columns in Fortran
3763
3764 @table @kbd
3765 @item C-c C-r
3766 Display a ``column ruler'' momentarily above the current line
3767 (@code{fortran-column-ruler}).
3768 @item C-c C-w
3769 Split the current window horizontally temporarily so that it is 72
3770 columns wide (@code{fortran-window-create-momentarily}). This may
3771 help you avoid making lines longer than the 72-character limit that
3772 some Fortran compilers impose.
3773 @item C-u C-c C-w
3774 Split the current window horizontally so that it is 72 columns wide
3775 (@code{fortran-window-create}). You can then continue editing.
3776 @item M-x fortran-strip-sequence-nos
3777 Delete all text in column 72 and beyond.
3778 @end table
3779
3780 @kindex C-c C-r @r{(Fortran mode)}
3781 @findex fortran-column-ruler
3782 The command @kbd{C-c C-r} (@code{fortran-column-ruler}) shows a column
3783 ruler momentarily above the current line. The comment ruler is two lines
3784 of text that show you the locations of columns with special significance in
3785 Fortran programs. Square brackets show the limits of the columns for line
3786 numbers, and curly brackets show the limits of the columns for the
3787 statement body. Column numbers appear above them.
3788
3789 Note that the column numbers count from zero, as always in GNU Emacs.
3790 As a result, the numbers may be one less than those you are familiar
3791 with; but the positions they indicate in the line are standard for
3792 Fortran.
3793
3794 @vindex fortran-column-ruler-fixed
3795 @vindex fortran-column-ruler-tabs
3796 The text used to display the column ruler depends on the value of
3797 the variable @code{indent-tabs-mode}. If @code{indent-tabs-mode} is
3798 @code{nil}, then the value of the variable
3799 @code{fortran-column-ruler-fixed} is used as the column ruler.
3800 Otherwise, the variable @code{fortran-column-ruler-tab} is displayed.
3801 By changing these variables, you can change the column ruler display.
3802
3803 @kindex C-c C-w @r{(Fortran mode)}
3804 @findex fortran-window-create-momentarily
3805 @kbd{C-c C-w} (@code{fortran-window-create-momentarily}) temporarily
3806 splits the current window horizontally, making a window 72 columns
3807 wide, so you can see which lines that is too long. Type a space to
3808 restore the normal width.
3809
3810 @kindex C-u C-c C-w @r{(Fortran mode)}
3811 @findex fortran-window-create
3812 You can also split the window horizontally and continue editing with
3813 the split in place. To do this, use @kbd{C-u C-c C-w} (@code{M-x
3814 fortran-window-create}). By editing in this window you can
3815 immediately see when you make a line too wide to be correct Fortran.
3816
3817 @findex fortran-strip-sequence-nos
3818 The command @kbd{M-x fortran-strip-sequence-nos} deletes all text in
3819 column 72 and beyond, on all lines in the current buffer. This is the
3820 easiest way to get rid of old sequence numbers.
3821
3822 @node Fortran Abbrev
3823 @subsection Fortran Keyword Abbrevs
3824
3825 Fortran mode provides many built-in abbrevs for common keywords and
3826 declarations. These are the same sort of abbrev that you can define
3827 yourself. To use them, you must turn on Abbrev mode. @xref{Abbrevs}.
3828
3829 The built-in abbrevs are unusual in one way: they all start with a
3830 semicolon. You cannot normally use semicolon in an abbrev, but Fortran
3831 mode makes this possible by changing the syntax of semicolon to ``word
3832 constituent.''
3833
3834 For example, one built-in Fortran abbrev is @samp{;c} for
3835 @samp{continue}. If you insert @samp{;c} and then insert a punctuation
3836 character such as a space or a newline, the @samp{;c} expands automatically
3837 to @samp{continue}, provided Abbrev mode is enabled.@refill
3838
3839 Type @samp{;?} or @samp{;C-h} to display a list of all the built-in
3840 Fortran abbrevs and what they stand for.
3841
3842 @node Asm Mode
3843 @section Asm Mode
3844
3845 @cindex Asm mode
3846 @cindex assembler mode
3847 Asm mode is a major mode for editing files of assembler code. It
3848 defines these commands:
3849
3850 @table @kbd
3851 @item @key{TAB}
3852 @code{tab-to-tab-stop}.
3853 @item C-j
3854 Insert a newline and then indent using @code{tab-to-tab-stop}.
3855 @item :
3856 Insert a colon and then remove the indentation from before the label
3857 preceding colon. Then do @code{tab-to-tab-stop}.
3858 @item ;
3859 Insert or align a comment.
3860 @end table
3861
3862 The variable @code{asm-comment-char} specifies which character
3863 starts comments in assembler syntax.