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1 @c -*-texinfo-*-
2 @c This is part of the GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.
3 @c Copyright (C) 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1998, 1999, 2002, 2003,
4 @c 2004, 2005, 2006 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5 @c See the file elisp.texi for copying conditions.
6 @setfilename ../info/help
7 @node Documentation, Files, Modes, Top
8 @chapter Documentation
9 @cindex documentation strings
10
11 GNU Emacs Lisp has convenient on-line help facilities, most of which
12 derive their information from the documentation strings associated with
13 functions and variables. This chapter describes how to write good
14 documentation strings for your Lisp programs, as well as how to write
15 programs to access documentation.
16
17 Note that the documentation strings for Emacs are not the same thing
18 as the Emacs manual. Manuals have their own source files, written in
19 the Texinfo language; documentation strings are specified in the
20 definitions of the functions and variables they apply to. A collection
21 of documentation strings is not sufficient as a manual because a good
22 manual is not organized in that fashion; it is organized in terms of
23 topics of discussion.
24
25 @menu
26 * Documentation Basics:: Good style for doc strings.
27 Where to put them. How Emacs stores them.
28 * Accessing Documentation:: How Lisp programs can access doc strings.
29 * Keys in Documentation:: Substituting current key bindings.
30 * Describing Characters:: Making printable descriptions of
31 non-printing characters and key sequences.
32 * Help Functions:: Subroutines used by Emacs help facilities.
33 @end menu
34
35 @node Documentation Basics
36 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
37 @section Documentation Basics
38 @cindex documentation conventions
39 @cindex writing a documentation string
40 @cindex string, writing a doc string
41
42 A documentation string is written using the Lisp syntax for strings,
43 with double-quote characters surrounding the text of the string. This
44 is because it really is a Lisp string object. The string serves as
45 documentation when it is written in the proper place in the definition
46 of a function or variable. In a function definition, the documentation
47 string follows the argument list. In a variable definition, the
48 documentation string follows the initial value of the variable.
49
50 When you write a documentation string, make the first line a
51 complete sentence (or two complete sentences) since some commands,
52 such as @code{apropos}, show only the first line of a multi-line
53 documentation string. Also, you should not indent the second line of
54 a documentation string, if it has one, because that looks odd when you
55 use @kbd{C-h f} (@code{describe-function}) or @kbd{C-h v}
56 (@code{describe-variable}) to view the documentation string. There
57 are many other conventions for doc strings; see @ref{Documentation
58 Tips}.
59
60 Documentation strings can contain several special substrings, which
61 stand for key bindings to be looked up in the current keymaps when the
62 documentation is displayed. This allows documentation strings to refer
63 to the keys for related commands and be accurate even when a user
64 rearranges the key bindings. (@xref{Keys in Documentation}.)
65
66 In Emacs Lisp, a documentation string is accessible through the
67 function or variable that it describes:
68
69 @itemize @bullet
70 @item
71 @kindex function-documentation
72 The documentation for a function is usually stored in the function
73 definition itself (@pxref{Lambda Expressions}). The function
74 @code{documentation} knows how to extract it. You can also put
75 function documentation in the @code{function-documentation} property
76 of the function name. That is useful with definitions such as
77 keyboard macros that can't hold a documentation string.
78
79 @item
80 @kindex variable-documentation
81 The documentation for a variable is stored in the variable's property
82 list under the property name @code{variable-documentation}. The
83 function @code{documentation-property} knows how to retrieve it.
84 @end itemize
85
86 @cindex @file{DOC} (documentation) file
87 @cindex @file{emacs/etc/DOC-@var{version}}
88 @cindex @file{etc/DOC-@var{version}}
89 To save space, the documentation for preloaded functions and variables
90 (including primitive functions and autoloaded functions) is stored in
91 the file @file{emacs/etc/DOC-@var{version}}---not inside Emacs. The
92 documentation strings for functions and variables loaded during the
93 Emacs session from byte-compiled files are stored in those files
94 (@pxref{Docs and Compilation}).
95
96 The data structure inside Emacs has an integer offset into the file, or
97 a list containing a file name and an integer, in place of the
98 documentation string. The functions @code{documentation} and
99 @code{documentation-property} use that information to fetch the
100 documentation string from the appropriate file; this is transparent to
101 the user.
102
103 For information on the uses of documentation strings, see @ref{Help, ,
104 Help, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}.
105
106 @c Wordy to prevent overfull hbox. --rjc 15mar92
107 The @file{emacs/lib-src} directory contains two utilities that you can
108 use to print nice-looking hardcopy for the file
109 @file{emacs/etc/DOC-@var{version}}. These are @file{sorted-doc} and
110 @file{digest-doc}.
111
112 @node Accessing Documentation
113 @section Access to Documentation Strings
114
115 @defun documentation-property symbol property &optional verbatim
116 This function returns the documentation string that is recorded in
117 @var{symbol}'s property list under property @var{property}. It
118 retrieves the text from a file if the value calls for that. If the
119 property value isn't @code{nil}, isn't a string, and doesn't refer to
120 text in a file, then it is evaluated to obtain a string.
121
122 The last thing this function does is pass the string through
123 @code{substitute-command-keys} to substitute actual key bindings,
124 unless @var{verbatim} is non-@code{nil}.
125
126 @smallexample
127 @group
128 (documentation-property 'command-line-processed
129 'variable-documentation)
130 @result{} "Non-nil once command line has been processed"
131 @end group
132 @group
133 (symbol-plist 'command-line-processed)
134 @result{} (variable-documentation 188902)
135 @end group
136 @group
137 (documentation-property 'emacs 'group-documentation)
138 @result{} "Customization of the One True Editor."
139 @end group
140 @end smallexample
141 @end defun
142
143 @defun documentation function &optional verbatim
144 This function returns the documentation string of @var{function}.
145 @code{documentation} handles macros, named keyboard macros, and
146 special forms, as well as ordinary functions.
147
148 If @var{function} is a symbol, this function first looks for the
149 @code{function-documentation} property of that symbol; if that has a
150 non-@code{nil} value, the documentation comes from that value (if the
151 value is not a string, it is evaluated). If @var{function} is not a
152 symbol, or if it has no @code{function-documentation} property, then
153 @code{documentation} extracts the documentation string from the actual
154 function definition, reading it from a file if called for.
155
156 Finally, unless @var{verbatim} is non-@code{nil}, it calls
157 @code{substitute-command-keys} so as to return a value containing the
158 actual (current) key bindings.
159
160 The function @code{documentation} signals a @code{void-function} error
161 if @var{function} has no function definition. However, it is OK if
162 the function definition has no documentation string. In that case,
163 @code{documentation} returns @code{nil}.
164 @end defun
165
166 @defun face-documentation face
167 This function returns the documentation string of @var{face} as a
168 face.
169 @end defun
170
171 @c Wordy to prevent overfull hboxes. --rjc 15mar92
172 Here is an example of using the two functions, @code{documentation} and
173 @code{documentation-property}, to display the documentation strings for
174 several symbols in a @samp{*Help*} buffer.
175
176 @anchor{describe-symbols example}
177 @smallexample
178 @group
179 (defun describe-symbols (pattern)
180 "Describe the Emacs Lisp symbols matching PATTERN.
181 All symbols that have PATTERN in their name are described
182 in the `*Help*' buffer."
183 (interactive "sDescribe symbols matching: ")
184 (let ((describe-func
185 (function
186 (lambda (s)
187 @end group
188 @group
189 ;; @r{Print description of symbol.}
190 (if (fboundp s) ; @r{It is a function.}
191 (princ
192 (format "%s\t%s\n%s\n\n" s
193 (if (commandp s)
194 (let ((keys (where-is-internal s)))
195 (if keys
196 (concat
197 "Keys: "
198 (mapconcat 'key-description
199 keys " "))
200 "Keys: none"))
201 "Function")
202 @end group
203 @group
204 (or (documentation s)
205 "not documented"))))
206
207 (if (boundp s) ; @r{It is a variable.}
208 @end group
209 @group
210 (princ
211 (format "%s\t%s\n%s\n\n" s
212 (if (user-variable-p s)
213 "Option " "Variable")
214 @end group
215 @group
216 (or (documentation-property
217 s 'variable-documentation)
218 "not documented")))))))
219 sym-list)
220 @end group
221
222 @group
223 ;; @r{Build a list of symbols that match pattern.}
224 (mapatoms (function
225 (lambda (sym)
226 (if (string-match pattern (symbol-name sym))
227 (setq sym-list (cons sym sym-list))))))
228 @end group
229
230 @group
231 ;; @r{Display the data.}
232 (with-output-to-temp-buffer "*Help*"
233 (mapcar describe-func (sort sym-list 'string<))
234 (print-help-return-message))))
235 @end group
236 @end smallexample
237
238 The @code{describe-symbols} function works like @code{apropos},
239 but provides more information.
240
241 @smallexample
242 @group
243 (describe-symbols "goal")
244
245 ---------- Buffer: *Help* ----------
246 goal-column Option
247 *Semipermanent goal column for vertical motion, as set by @dots{}
248 @end group
249 @c Do not blithely break or fill these lines.
250 @c That makes them incorrect.
251
252 @group
253 set-goal-column Keys: C-x C-n
254 Set the current horizontal position as a goal for C-n and C-p.
255 @end group
256 @c DO NOT put a blank line here! That is factually inaccurate!
257 @group
258 Those commands will move to this position in the line moved to
259 rather than trying to keep the same horizontal position.
260 With a non-nil argument, clears out the goal column
261 so that C-n and C-p resume vertical motion.
262 The goal column is stored in the variable `goal-column'.
263 @end group
264
265 @group
266 temporary-goal-column Variable
267 Current goal column for vertical motion.
268 It is the column where point was
269 at the start of current run of vertical motion commands.
270 When the `track-eol' feature is doing its job, the value is 9999.
271 ---------- Buffer: *Help* ----------
272 @end group
273 @end smallexample
274
275 The asterisk @samp{*} as the first character of a variable's doc string,
276 as shown above for the @code{goal-column} variable, means that it is a
277 user option; see the description of @code{defvar} in @ref{Defining
278 Variables}.
279
280 @defun Snarf-documentation filename
281 @anchor{Definition of Snarf-documentation}
282 This function is used only during Emacs initialization, just before
283 the runnable Emacs is dumped. It finds the file offsets of the
284 documentation strings stored in the file @var{filename}, and records
285 them in the in-core function definitions and variable property lists in
286 place of the actual strings. @xref{Building Emacs}.
287
288 Emacs reads the file @var{filename} from the @file{emacs/etc} directory.
289 When the dumped Emacs is later executed, the same file will be looked
290 for in the directory @code{doc-directory}. Usually @var{filename} is
291 @code{"DOC-@var{version}"}.
292 @end defun
293
294 @c Emacs 19 feature
295 @defvar doc-directory
296 This variable holds the name of the directory which should contain the
297 file @code{"DOC-@var{version}"} that contains documentation strings for
298 built-in and preloaded functions and variables.
299
300 In most cases, this is the same as @code{data-directory}. They may be
301 different when you run Emacs from the directory where you built it,
302 without actually installing it. @xref{Definition of data-directory}.
303
304 In older Emacs versions, @code{exec-directory} was used for this.
305 @end defvar
306
307 @node Keys in Documentation
308 @section Substituting Key Bindings in Documentation
309 @cindex documentation, keys in
310 @cindex keys in documentation strings
311 @cindex substituting keys in documentation
312
313 When documentation strings refer to key sequences, they should use the
314 current, actual key bindings. They can do so using certain special text
315 sequences described below. Accessing documentation strings in the usual
316 way substitutes current key binding information for these special
317 sequences. This works by calling @code{substitute-command-keys}. You
318 can also call that function yourself.
319
320 Here is a list of the special sequences and what they mean:
321
322 @table @code
323 @item \[@var{command}]
324 stands for a key sequence that will invoke @var{command}, or @samp{M-x
325 @var{command}} if @var{command} has no key bindings.
326
327 @item \@{@var{mapvar}@}
328 stands for a summary of the keymap which is the value of the variable
329 @var{mapvar}. The summary is made using @code{describe-bindings}.
330
331 @item \<@var{mapvar}>
332 stands for no text itself. It is used only for a side effect: it
333 specifies @var{mapvar}'s value as the keymap for any following
334 @samp{\[@var{command}]} sequences in this documentation string.
335
336 @item \=
337 quotes the following character and is discarded; thus, @samp{\=\[} puts
338 @samp{\[} into the output, and @samp{\=\=} puts @samp{\=} into the
339 output.
340 @end table
341
342 @strong{Please note:} Each @samp{\} must be doubled when written in a
343 string in Emacs Lisp.
344
345 @defun substitute-command-keys string
346 This function scans @var{string} for the above special sequences and
347 replaces them by what they stand for, returning the result as a string.
348 This permits display of documentation that refers accurately to the
349 user's own customized key bindings.
350 @end defun
351
352 Here are examples of the special sequences:
353
354 @smallexample
355 @group
356 (substitute-command-keys
357 "To abort recursive edit, type: \\[abort-recursive-edit]")
358 @result{} "To abort recursive edit, type: C-]"
359 @end group
360
361 @group
362 (substitute-command-keys
363 "The keys that are defined for the minibuffer here are:
364 \\@{minibuffer-local-must-match-map@}")
365 @result{} "The keys that are defined for the minibuffer here are:
366 @end group
367
368 ? minibuffer-completion-help
369 SPC minibuffer-complete-word
370 TAB minibuffer-complete
371 C-j minibuffer-complete-and-exit
372 RET minibuffer-complete-and-exit
373 C-g abort-recursive-edit
374 "
375
376 @group
377 (substitute-command-keys
378 "To abort a recursive edit from the minibuffer, type\
379 \\<minibuffer-local-must-match-map>\\[abort-recursive-edit].")
380 @result{} "To abort a recursive edit from the minibuffer, type C-g."
381 @end group
382 @end smallexample
383
384 @node Describing Characters
385 @section Describing Characters for Help Messages
386
387 These functions convert events, key sequences, or characters to
388 textual descriptions. These descriptions are useful for including
389 arbitrary text characters or key sequences in messages, because they
390 convert non-printing and whitespace characters to sequences of printing
391 characters. The description of a non-whitespace printing character is
392 the character itself.
393
394 @defun key-description sequence &optional prefix
395 @cindex Emacs event standard notation
396 This function returns a string containing the Emacs standard notation
397 for the input events in @var{sequence}. If @var{prefix} is
398 non-@code{nil}, it is a sequence of input events leading up to
399 @var{sequence} and is included in the return value. Both arguments
400 may be strings, vectors or lists. @xref{Input Events}, for more
401 information about valid events.
402
403 @smallexample
404 @group
405 (key-description [?\M-3 delete])
406 @result{} "M-3 <delete>"
407 @end group
408 @group
409 (key-description [delete] "\M-3")
410 @result{} "M-3 <delete>"
411 @end group
412 @end smallexample
413
414 See also the examples for @code{single-key-description}, below.
415 @end defun
416
417 @defun single-key-description event &optional no-angles
418 @cindex event printing
419 @cindex character printing
420 @cindex control character printing
421 @cindex meta character printing
422 This function returns a string describing @var{event} in the standard
423 Emacs notation for keyboard input. A normal printing character
424 appears as itself, but a control character turns into a string
425 starting with @samp{C-}, a meta character turns into a string starting
426 with @samp{M-}, and space, tab, etc.@: appear as @samp{SPC},
427 @samp{TAB}, etc. A function key symbol appears inside angle brackets
428 @samp{<@dots{}>}. An event that is a list appears as the name of the
429 symbol in the @sc{car} of the list, inside angle brackets.
430
431 If the optional argument @var{no-angles} is non-@code{nil}, the angle
432 brackets around function keys and event symbols are omitted; this is
433 for compatibility with old versions of Emacs which didn't use the
434 brackets.
435
436 @smallexample
437 @group
438 (single-key-description ?\C-x)
439 @result{} "C-x"
440 @end group
441 @group
442 (key-description "\C-x \M-y \n \t \r \f123")
443 @result{} "C-x SPC M-y SPC C-j SPC TAB SPC RET SPC C-l 1 2 3"
444 @end group
445 @group
446 (single-key-description 'delete)
447 @result{} "<delete>"
448 @end group
449 @group
450 (single-key-description 'C-mouse-1)
451 @result{} "<C-mouse-1>"
452 @end group
453 @group
454 (single-key-description 'C-mouse-1 t)
455 @result{} "C-mouse-1"
456 @end group
457 @end smallexample
458 @end defun
459
460 @defun text-char-description character
461 This function returns a string describing @var{character} in the
462 standard Emacs notation for characters that appear in text---like
463 @code{single-key-description}, except that control characters are
464 represented with a leading caret (which is how control characters in
465 Emacs buffers are usually displayed). Another difference is that
466 @code{text-char-description} recognizes the 2**7 bit as the Meta
467 character, whereas @code{single-key-description} uses the 2**27 bit
468 for Meta.
469
470 @smallexample
471 @group
472 (text-char-description ?\C-c)
473 @result{} "^C"
474 @end group
475 @group
476 (text-char-description ?\M-m)
477 @result{} "\xed"
478 @end group
479 @group
480 (text-char-description ?\C-\M-m)
481 @result{} "\x8d"
482 @end group
483 @group
484 (text-char-description (+ 128 ?m))
485 @result{} "M-m"
486 @end group
487 @group
488 (text-char-description (+ 128 ?\C-m))
489 @result{} "M-^M"
490 @end group
491 @end smallexample
492 @end defun
493
494 @defun read-kbd-macro string &optional need-vector
495 This function is used mainly for operating on keyboard macros, but it
496 can also be used as a rough inverse for @code{key-description}. You
497 call it with a string containing key descriptions, separated by spaces;
498 it returns a string or vector containing the corresponding events.
499 (This may or may not be a single valid key sequence, depending on what
500 events you use; @pxref{Keymap Terminology}.) If @var{need-vector} is
501 non-@code{nil}, the return value is always a vector.
502 @end defun
503
504 @node Help Functions
505 @section Help Functions
506
507 Emacs provides a variety of on-line help functions, all accessible to
508 the user as subcommands of the prefix @kbd{C-h}. For more information
509 about them, see @ref{Help, , Help, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}. Here
510 we describe some program-level interfaces to the same information.
511
512 @deffn Command apropos pattern &optional do-all
513 This function finds all ``meaningful'' symbols whose names contain a
514 match for the apropos pattern @var{pattern}. An apropos pattern is
515 either a word to match, a space-separated list of words of which at
516 least two must match, or a regular expression (if any special regular
517 expression characters occur). A symbol is ``meaningful'' if it has a
518 definition as a function, variable, or face, or has properties.
519
520 The function returns a list of elements that look like this:
521
522 @example
523 (@var{symbol} @var{score} @var{fn-doc} @var{var-doc}
524 @var{plist-doc} @var{widget-doc} @var{face-doc} @var{group-doc})
525 @end example
526
527 Here, @var{score} is an integer measure of how important the symbol
528 seems to be as a match, and the remaining elements are documentation
529 strings for @var{symbol}'s various roles (or @code{nil}).
530
531 It also displays the symbols in a buffer named @samp{*Apropos*}, each
532 with a one-line description taken from the beginning of its
533 documentation string.
534
535 @c Emacs 19 feature
536 If @var{do-all} is non-@code{nil}, or if the user option
537 @code{apropos-do-all} is non-@code{nil}, then @code{apropos} also
538 shows key bindings for the functions that are found; it also shows
539 @emph{all} interned symbols, not just meaningful ones (and it lists
540 them in the return value as well).
541 @end deffn
542
543 @defvar help-map
544 The value of this variable is a local keymap for characters following the
545 Help key, @kbd{C-h}.
546 @end defvar
547
548 @deffn {Prefix Command} help-command
549 This symbol is not a function; its function definition cell holds the
550 keymap known as @code{help-map}. It is defined in @file{help.el} as
551 follows:
552
553 @smallexample
554 @group
555 (define-key global-map (char-to-string help-char) 'help-command)
556 (fset 'help-command help-map)
557 @end group
558 @end smallexample
559 @end deffn
560
561 @defun print-help-return-message &optional function
562 This function builds a string that explains how to restore the previous
563 state of the windows after a help command. After building the message,
564 it applies @var{function} to it if @var{function} is non-@code{nil}.
565 Otherwise it calls @code{message} to display it in the echo area.
566
567 This function expects to be called inside a
568 @code{with-output-to-temp-buffer} special form, and expects
569 @code{standard-output} to have the value bound by that special form.
570 For an example of its use, see the long example in @ref{Accessing
571 Documentation}.
572 @end defun
573
574 @defvar help-char
575 The value of this variable is the help character---the character that
576 Emacs recognizes as meaning Help. By default, its value is 8, which
577 stands for @kbd{C-h}. When Emacs reads this character, if
578 @code{help-form} is a non-@code{nil} Lisp expression, it evaluates that
579 expression, and displays the result in a window if it is a string.
580
581 Usually the value of @code{help-form} is @code{nil}. Then the
582 help character has no special meaning at the level of command input, and
583 it becomes part of a key sequence in the normal way. The standard key
584 binding of @kbd{C-h} is a prefix key for several general-purpose help
585 features.
586
587 The help character is special after prefix keys, too. If it has no
588 binding as a subcommand of the prefix key, it runs
589 @code{describe-prefix-bindings}, which displays a list of all the
590 subcommands of the prefix key.
591 @end defvar
592
593 @defvar help-event-list
594 The value of this variable is a list of event types that serve as
595 alternative ``help characters.'' These events are handled just like the
596 event specified by @code{help-char}.
597 @end defvar
598
599 @defvar help-form
600 If this variable is non-@code{nil}, its value is a form to evaluate
601 whenever the character @code{help-char} is read. If evaluating the form
602 produces a string, that string is displayed.
603
604 A command that calls @code{read-event} or @code{read-char} probably
605 should bind @code{help-form} to a non-@code{nil} expression while it
606 does input. (The time when you should not do this is when @kbd{C-h} has
607 some other meaning.) Evaluating this expression should result in a
608 string that explains what the input is for and how to enter it properly.
609
610 Entry to the minibuffer binds this variable to the value of
611 @code{minibuffer-help-form} (@pxref{Definition of minibuffer-help-form}).
612 @end defvar
613
614 @defvar prefix-help-command
615 This variable holds a function to print help for a prefix key. The
616 function is called when the user types a prefix key followed by the help
617 character, and the help character has no binding after that prefix. The
618 variable's default value is @code{describe-prefix-bindings}.
619 @end defvar
620
621 @defun describe-prefix-bindings
622 This function calls @code{describe-bindings} to display a list of all
623 the subcommands of the prefix key of the most recent key sequence. The
624 prefix described consists of all but the last event of that key
625 sequence. (The last event is, presumably, the help character.)
626 @end defun
627
628 The following two functions are meant for modes that want to provide
629 help without relinquishing control, such as the ``electric'' modes.
630 Their names begin with @samp{Helper} to distinguish them from the
631 ordinary help functions.
632
633 @deffn Command Helper-describe-bindings
634 This command pops up a window displaying a help buffer containing a
635 listing of all of the key bindings from both the local and global keymaps.
636 It works by calling @code{describe-bindings}.
637 @end deffn
638
639 @deffn Command Helper-help
640 This command provides help for the current mode. It prompts the user
641 in the minibuffer with the message @samp{Help (Type ? for further
642 options)}, and then provides assistance in finding out what the key
643 bindings are, and what the mode is intended for. It returns @code{nil}.
644
645 This can be customized by changing the map @code{Helper-help-map}.
646 @end deffn
647
648 @c Emacs 19 feature
649 @defvar data-directory
650 @anchor{Definition of data-directory}
651 This variable holds the name of the directory in which Emacs finds
652 certain documentation and text files that come with Emacs. In older
653 Emacs versions, @code{exec-directory} was used for this.
654 @end defvar
655
656 @c Emacs 19 feature
657 @defmac make-help-screen fname help-line help-text help-map
658 This macro defines a help command named @var{fname} that acts like a
659 prefix key that shows a list of the subcommands it offers.
660
661 When invoked, @var{fname} displays @var{help-text} in a window, then
662 reads and executes a key sequence according to @var{help-map}. The
663 string @var{help-text} should describe the bindings available in
664 @var{help-map}.
665
666 The command @var{fname} is defined to handle a few events itself, by
667 scrolling the display of @var{help-text}. When @var{fname} reads one of
668 those special events, it does the scrolling and then reads another
669 event. When it reads an event that is not one of those few, and which
670 has a binding in @var{help-map}, it executes that key's binding and
671 then returns.
672
673 The argument @var{help-line} should be a single-line summary of the
674 alternatives in @var{help-map}. In the current version of Emacs, this
675 argument is used only if you set the option @code{three-step-help} to
676 @code{t}.
677
678 This macro is used in the command @code{help-for-help} which is the
679 binding of @kbd{C-h C-h}.
680 @end defmac
681
682 @defopt three-step-help
683 If this variable is non-@code{nil}, commands defined with
684 @code{make-help-screen} display their @var{help-line} strings in the
685 echo area at first, and display the longer @var{help-text} strings only
686 if the user types the help character again.
687 @end defopt
688
689 @ignore
690 arch-tag: ba36b4c2-e60f-49e2-bc25-61158fdcd815
691 @end ignore