]> code.delx.au - gnu-emacs/blob - man/mini.texi
(turkish-case-conversion-enable)
[gnu-emacs] / man / mini.texi
1 @c This is part of the Emacs manual.
2 @c Copyright (C) 1985, 1986, 1987, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1997, 2000, 2001,
3 @c 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4 @c See file emacs.texi for copying conditions.
5 @node Minibuffer, M-x, Basic, Top
6 @chapter The Minibuffer
7 @cindex minibuffer
8
9 The @dfn{minibuffer} is where Emacs commands read complicated
10 arguments (anything more a single number). We call it the
11 ``minibuffer'' because it's a special-purpose buffer with a small
12 amount of screen space. Minibuffer arguments can be file names,
13 buffer names, Lisp function names, Emacs command names, Lisp
14 expressions, and many other things---whatever the command wants to
15 read. You can use the usual Emacs editing commands in the minibuffer
16 to edit the argument text.
17
18 @cindex prompt
19 When the minibuffer is in use, it appears in the echo area, with a
20 cursor. The minibuffer display starts with a @dfn{prompt} in a
21 distinct color; it says what kind of input is expected and how it will
22 be used. Often the prompt is derived from the name of the command
23 that is reading the argument. The prompt normally ends with a colon.
24
25 @cindex default argument
26 Sometimes a @dfn{default argument} appears in the prompt, inside
27 parentheses before the colon. The default will be used as the
28 argument value if you just type @key{RET}. For example, commands that
29 read buffer names show a buffer name as the default. You can type
30 @key{RET} to operate on that default buffer.
31
32 The simplest way to enter a minibuffer argument is to type the text,
33 then @key{RET} to exit the minibuffer. You can cancel the minibuffer,
34 and the command that wants the argument, by typing @kbd{C-g}.
35
36 Since the minibuffer appears in the echo area, it can conflict with
37 other uses of the echo area. Here is how Emacs handles such
38 conflicts:
39
40 @itemize @bullet
41 @item
42 An error occurs while the minibuffer is active.
43
44 The error message hides the minibuffer for a few seconds, or until you
45 type something. Then the minibuffer comes back.
46
47 @item
48 A command such as @kbd{C-x =} needs to display a message in the echo
49 area.
50
51 The message hides the minibuffer for a few seconds, or until you type
52 something. Then the minibuffer comes back.
53
54 @item
55 Keystrokes don't echo while the minibuffer is in use.
56 @end itemize
57
58 @menu
59 * File: Minibuffer File. Entering file names with the minibuffer.
60 * Edit: Minibuffer Edit. How to edit in the minibuffer.
61 * Completion:: An abbreviation facility for minibuffer input.
62 * Minibuffer History:: Reusing recent minibuffer arguments.
63 * Repetition:: Re-executing commands that used the minibuffer.
64 @end menu
65
66 @node Minibuffer File
67 @section Minibuffers for File Names
68
69 When you use the minibuffer to enter a file name, it starts out with
70 some initial text---the @dfn{default directory}, ending in a slash.
71 The file you specify will be in this directory unless you alter or
72 replace it.
73
74 @c Separate paragraph to clean up ugly page break--rms
75 @need 1500
76 For example, if the minibuffer starts out with these contents:
77
78 @example
79 Find File: /u2/emacs/src/
80 @end example
81
82 @noindent
83 (where @samp{Find File:@: } is the prompt), and you type
84 @kbd{buffer.c} as input, that specifies the file
85 @file{/u2/emacs/src/buffer.c}. You can specify the parent directory
86 by adding @file{..}; thus, if you type @kbd{../lisp/simple.el}, you
87 will get @file{/u2/emacs/lisp/simple.el}. Alternatively, you can use
88 @kbd{M-@key{DEL}} to kill the directory names you don't want
89 (@pxref{Words}).
90
91 You can kill the entire default with @kbd{C-a C-k}, but there's no
92 need to do that. It's easier to ignore the default, and enter an
93 absolute file name starting with a slash or a tilde after the default
94 directory. For example, to specify @file{/etc/termcap}, just type
95 that name:
96
97 @example
98 Find File: /u2/emacs/src//etc/termcap
99 @end example
100
101 @noindent
102 @cindex // in file name
103 @cindex double slash in file name
104 @cindex slashes repeated in file name
105 @findex file-name-shadow-mode
106 GNU Emacs interprets a double slash (which is not normally useful in
107 file names) as, ``ignore everything before the second slash in the
108 pair.'' In the example above. @samp{/u2/emacs/src/} is ignored, so
109 you get @file{/etc/termcap}. The ignored part of the file name is
110 dimmed if the terminal allows it; to disable this dimming, turn off
111 File Name Shadow mode (a minor mode) with the command
112 @kbd{M-x file-name-shadow-mode}.
113
114 If the variable @code{insert-default-directory} is @code{nil}, the
115 default directory is never inserted in the minibuffer---so the
116 minibuffer starts out empty. Nonetheless, relative file name
117 arguments are still interpreted based on the same default directory.
118
119 @node Minibuffer Edit
120 @section Editing in the Minibuffer
121
122 The minibuffer is an Emacs buffer (albeit a peculiar one), and the
123 usual Emacs commands are available for editing the argument text.
124
125 Since @key{RET} in the minibuffer is defined to exit the minibuffer,
126 you can't use it to insert a newline in the minibuffer. To do that,
127 type @kbd{C-o} or @kbd{C-q C-j}. (The newline character is really the
128 @acronym{ASCII} character control-J.)
129
130 The minibuffer has its own window, which normally has space in the
131 frame at all times, but it only acts like an Emacs window when the
132 minibuffer is active. When active, this window is much like any other
133 Emacs window; for instance, you can switch to another window (with
134 @kbd{C-x o}), edit text there, then return to the minibuffer window to
135 finish the argument. You can even kill text in another window, return
136 to the minibuffer window, and then yank the text into the argument.
137 @xref{Windows}.
138
139 @cindex height of minibuffer
140 @cindex size of minibuffer
141 @cindex growing minibuffer
142 @cindex resizing minibuffer
143 There are some restrictions on the minibuffer window, however: you
144 cannot kill it, or split it, or switch buffers in it---the minibuffer
145 and its window are permanently attached.
146
147 @vindex resize-mini-windows
148 The minibuffer window expands vertically as necessary to hold the
149 text that you put in the minibuffer. If @code{resize-mini-windows} is
150 @code{t} (the default), the window always resizes as needed by its
151 contents. If its value is the symbol @code{grow-only}, the window
152 grows automatically as needed, but shrinks (back to the normal size)
153 only when the minibuffer becomes inactive. If its value is
154 @code{nil}, you have to adjust the height yourself.
155
156 @vindex max-mini-window-height
157 The variable @code{max-mini-window-height} controls the maximum
158 height for resizing the minibuffer window: a floating-point number
159 specifies a fraction of the frame's height; an integer specifies the
160 maximum number of lines; @code{nil} means do not resize the minibuffer
161 window automatically. The default value is 0.25.
162
163 The @kbd{C-M-v} command in the minibuffer scrolls the help text from
164 commands that display help text of any sort in another window.
165 @kbd{M-@key{PAGEUP}} and @kbd{M-@key{PAGEDOWN}} also operate on that
166 help text. This is especially useful with long lists of possible
167 completions. @xref{Other Window}.
168
169 @vindex enable-recursive-minibuffers
170 Emacs normally disallows most commands that use the minibuffer while
171 the minibuffer is active. (Entering the minibuffer from the
172 minibuffer can be confusing.) To allow such commands in the
173 minibuffer, set the variable @code{enable-recursive-minibuffers} to
174 @code{t}.
175
176 @node Completion
177 @section Completion
178 @cindex completion
179
180 Some arguments allow @dfn{completion} to enter their value. This
181 means that after you type part of the argument, Emacs can fill in the
182 rest, or some of it, based on what you have typed so far.
183
184 When completion is available, certain keys---@key{TAB}, @key{RET},
185 and @key{SPC}---are rebound to complete the text in the minibuffer
186 before point into a longer string chosen from a set of @dfn{completion
187 alternatives} provided by the command that requested the argument.
188 (@key{SPC} does not do completion in reading file names, because it is
189 common to use spaces in file names on some systems.) @kbd{?} displays
190 a list of the possible completions at any time.
191
192 For example, @kbd{M-x} uses the minibuffer to read the name of a
193 command, so it provides a list of all Emacs command names for
194 completion candidates. The completion keys match the minibuffer text
195 against these candidates, find any additional name characters implied
196 by the text already present in the minibuffer, and add those
197 characters. This makes it possible to type @kbd{M-x ins @key{SPC} b
198 @key{RET}} instead of @kbd{M-x insert-buffer @key{RET}}, for example.
199
200 Case is significant in completion when it is significant in the
201 argument you are entering (buffer names, file names, command names,
202 for instance). Thus, @samp{fo} does not complete to @samp{Foo}.
203 Completion ignores case distinctions for certain arguments in which
204 case does not matter.
205
206 Completion acts only on the text before point. If there is text in
207 the minibuffer after point---i.e., if you move point backward after
208 typing some text into the minibuffer---it remains unchanged.
209
210 @menu
211 * Example: Completion Example. Examples of using completion.
212 * Commands: Completion Commands. A list of completion commands.
213 * Strict Completion:: Different types of completion.
214 * Options: Completion Options. Options for completion.
215 @end menu
216
217 @node Completion Example
218 @subsection Completion Example
219
220 @kindex TAB @r{(completion)}
221 A concrete example may help here. If you type @kbd{M-x au
222 @key{TAB}}, the @key{TAB} looks for alternatives (in this case,
223 command names) that start with @samp{au}. There are several,
224 including @code{auto-fill-mode} and @code{auto-save-mode}, but they
225 all begin with @code{auto-}, so the @samp{au} in the minibuffer
226 completes to @samp{auto-}.
227
228 If you type @key{TAB} again immediately, it cannot determine the
229 next character; it could be any of @samp{cfilrs}. So it does not add
230 any characters; instead, @key{TAB} displays a list of all possible
231 completions in another window.
232
233 Now type @kbd{f @key{TAB}}. This @key{TAB} sees @samp{auto-f}. The
234 only command name starting with that is @code{auto-fill-mode}, so
235 completion fills in the rest of that. You have been able to enter
236 @samp{auto-fill-mode} by typing just @kbd{au @key{TAB} f @key{TAB}}.
237
238 @node Completion Commands
239 @subsection Completion Commands
240
241 Here is a list of the completion commands defined in the minibuffer
242 when completion is allowed.
243
244 @table @kbd
245 @item @key{TAB}
246 @findex minibuffer-complete
247 Complete the text before point in the minibuffer as much as possible
248 (@code{minibuffer-complete}).
249 @item @key{SPC}
250 Complete up to one word from the minibuffer text before point
251 (@code{minibuffer-complete-word}). @key{SPC} for completion is not
252 available when entering a file name, since file names often include
253 spaces.
254 @item @key{RET}
255 Submit the text in the minibuffer as the argument, possibly completing
256 first as described
257 @iftex
258 in the next subsection (@code{minibuffer-complete-and-exit}).
259 @end iftex
260 @ifnottex
261 in the next node (@code{minibuffer-complete-and-exit}). @xref{Strict
262 Completion}.
263 @end ifnottex
264 @item ?
265 Display a list of possible completions of the text before point
266 (@code{minibuffer-completion-help}).
267 @end table
268
269 @kindex SPC
270 @findex minibuffer-complete-word
271 @key{SPC} completes like @key{TAB}, but only up to the next hyphen
272 or space. If you have @samp{auto-f} in the minibuffer and type
273 @key{SPC}, it finds that the completion is @samp{auto-fill-mode}, but
274 it only inserts @samp{ill-}, giving @samp{auto-fill-}. Another
275 @key{SPC} at this point completes all the way to
276 @samp{auto-fill-mode}. The command that implements this behavior is
277 called @code{minibuffer-complete-word}.
278
279 When you display a list of possible completions, you can choose
280 one from it:
281
282 @table @kbd
283 @findex mouse-choose-completion
284 @item Mouse-1
285 @itemx Mouse-2
286 Clicking mouse button 1 or 2 on a completion possibility chooses that
287 completion (@code{mouse-choose-completion}). You must click in the
288 list of completions, not in the minibuffer.
289
290 @findex switch-to-completions
291 @item @key{PRIOR}
292 @itemx M-v
293 Typing @key{PRIOR} or @key{PAGE-UP}, or @kbd{M-v}, while in the
294 minibuffer, selects the window showing the completion list buffer
295 (@code{switch-to-completions}). This paves the way for using the
296 commands below. (Selecting that window in other ways has the same
297 effect.)
298
299 @findex choose-completion
300 @item @key{RET}
301 Typing @key{RET} @emph{in the completion list buffer} chooses the
302 completion that point is in or next to (@code{choose-completion}). To
303 use this command, you must first switch to the completion list window.
304
305 @findex next-completion
306 @item @key{RIGHT}
307 Typing the right-arrow key @key{RIGHT} @emph{in the completion list
308 buffer} moves point to the following completion possibility
309 (@code{next-completion}).
310
311 @findex previous-completion
312 @item @key{LEFT}
313 Typing the left-arrow key @key{LEFT} @emph{in the completion list
314 buffer} moves point to the previous completion possibility
315 (@code{previous-completion}).
316 @end table
317
318 @node Strict Completion
319 @subsection Strict Completion
320
321 There are three different ways that @key{RET} can do completion,
322 depending on how the argument will be used.
323
324 @itemize @bullet
325 @item
326 @dfn{Strict} completion accepts only known completion candidates. For
327 example, when @kbd{C-x k} reads the name of a buffer to kill, only the
328 name of an existing buffer makes sense. In strict completion,
329 @key{RET} refuses to exit if the text in the minibuffer does not
330 complete to an exact match.
331
332 @item
333 @dfn{Cautious} completion is similar to strict completion, except that
334 @key{RET} exits only if the text is an already exact match.
335 Otherwise, @key{RET} does not exit, but it does complete the text. If
336 that completes to an exact match, a second @key{RET} will exit.
337
338 Cautious completion is used for reading file names for files that must
339 already exist, for example.
340
341 @item
342 @dfn{Permissive} completion allows any input; the completion
343 candidates are just suggestions. For example, when @kbd{C-x C-f}
344 reads the name of a file to visit, any file name is allowed, including
345 nonexistent file (in case you want to create a file). In permissive
346 completion, @key{RET} does not complete, it just submits the argument
347 as you have entered it.
348 @end itemize
349
350 The completion commands display a list of all possible completions
351 whenever they can't determine even one more character by completion.
352 Also, typing @kbd{?} explicitly requests such a list. You can scroll
353 the list with @kbd{C-M-v} (@pxref{Other Window}).
354
355 @node Completion Options
356 @subsection Completion Options
357
358 @vindex completion-ignored-extensions
359 @cindex ignored file names, in completion
360 When completing file names, certain file names are usually ignored.
361 The variable @code{completion-ignored-extensions} contains a list of
362 strings; a file name ending in any of those strings is ignored as a
363 completion candidate. The standard value of this variable has several
364 elements including @code{".o"}, @code{".elc"}, @code{".dvi"} and
365 @code{"~"}. The effect is that, for example, @samp{foo} can complete
366 to @samp{foo.c} even though @samp{foo.o} exists as well. However, if
367 @emph{all} the possible completions end in ``ignored'' strings, then
368 they are not ignored. Displaying a list of possible completions
369 disregards @code{completion-ignored-extensions}; it shows them all.
370
371 If an element of @code{completion-ignored-extensions} ends in a
372 slash (@file{/}), it's a subdirectory name; then that directory and
373 its contents are ignored. Elements of
374 @code{completion-ignored-extensions} which do not end in a slash are
375 ordinary file names, and do not apply to names of directories.
376
377 @vindex completion-auto-help
378 If @code{completion-auto-help} is set to @code{nil}, the completion
379 commands never display a list of possibilities; you must type @kbd{?}
380 to display the list.
381
382 @cindex Partial Completion mode
383 @vindex partial-completion-mode
384 @findex partial-completion-mode
385 Partial Completion mode implements a more powerful kind of
386 completion that can complete multiple words in parallel. For example,
387 it can complete the command name abbreviation @code{p-b} into
388 @code{print-buffer} if no other command starts with two words whose
389 initials are @samp{p} and @samp{b}.
390
391 To enable this mode, use @kbd{M-x partial-completion-mode}, or
392 customize the variable @code{partial-completion-mode}. This mode
393 binds special partial completion commands to @key{TAB}, @key{SPC},
394 @key{RET}, and @kbd{?} in the minibuffer. The usual completion
395 commands are available on @kbd{M-@key{TAB}} (or @kbd{C-M-i}),
396 @kbd{M-@key{SPC}}, @kbd{M-@key{RET}} and @kbd{M-?}.
397
398 Partial completion of directories in file names uses @samp{*} to
399 indicate the places for completion; thus, @file{/u*/b*/f*} might
400 complete to @file{/usr/bin/foo}. For remote files, partial completion
401 enables completion of methods, user names and host names.
402 @xref{Remote Files}.
403
404 @vindex PC-include-file-path
405 @vindex PC-disable-includes
406 Partial Completion mode also extends @code{find-file} so that
407 @samp{<@var{include}>} looks for the file named @var{include} in the
408 directories in the path @code{PC-include-file-path}. If you set
409 @code{PC-disable-includes} to non-@code{nil}, this feature is
410 disabled.
411
412 @cindex Icomplete mode
413 @findex icomplete-mode
414 Icomplete mode presents a constantly-updated display that tells you
415 what completions are available for the text you've entered so far. The
416 command to enable or disable this minor mode is @kbd{M-x
417 icomplete-mode}.
418
419 @node Minibuffer History
420 @section Minibuffer History
421 @cindex minibuffer history
422 @cindex history of minibuffer input
423
424 Every argument that you enter with the minibuffer is saved on a
425 @dfn{minibuffer history list} so you can easily use it again later.
426 Special commands fetch the text of an earlier argument into the
427 minibuffer, replacing the old minibuffer contents. You can think of
428 them as moving through the history of previous arguments.
429
430 @table @kbd
431 @item @key{UP}
432 @itemx M-p
433 Move to the previous item in the minibuffer history, an earlier argument
434 (@code{previous-history-element}).
435 @item @key{DOWN}
436 @itemx M-n
437 Move to the next item in the minibuffer history
438 (@code{next-history-element}).
439 @item M-r @var{regexp} @key{RET}
440 Move to an earlier item in the minibuffer history that
441 matches @var{regexp} (@code{previous-matching-history-element}).
442 @item M-s @var{regexp} @key{RET}
443 Move to a later item in the minibuffer history that matches
444 @var{regexp} (@code{next-matching-history-element}).
445 @end table
446
447 @kindex M-p @r{(minibuffer history)}
448 @kindex M-n @r{(minibuffer history)}
449 @findex next-history-element
450 @findex previous-history-element
451 To move through the minibuffer history list one item at a time, use
452 @kbd{M-p} or up-arrow (@code{previous-history-element}) to fetch the
453 next earlier minibuffer input, and use @kbd{M-n} or down-arrow
454 (@code{next-history-element}) to fetch the next later input. These
455 commands don't move the cursor, they pull different saved strings into
456 the minibuffer. But you can think of them as ``moving'' through the
457 history list.
458
459 The input that you fetch from the history entirely replaces the
460 contents of the minibuffer. To use it again unchanged, just type
461 @key{RET}. You can also edit the text before you reuse it; this does
462 not change the history element that you ``moved'' to, but your new
463 argument does go at the end of the history list in its own right.
464
465 For many minibuffer arguments there is a ``default'' value. You can
466 insert the default value into the minibuffer as text by using
467 @kbd{M-n}. You can think of this as moving ``into the future'' in the
468 history.
469
470 @findex previous-matching-history-element
471 @findex next-matching-history-element
472 @kindex M-r @r{(minibuffer history)}
473 @kindex M-s @r{(minibuffer history)}
474 There are also commands to search forward or backward through the
475 history; they search for history elements that match a regular
476 expression. @kbd{M-r} (@code{previous-matching-history-element})
477 searches older elements in the history, while @kbd{M-s}
478 (@code{next-matching-history-element}) searches newer elements. These
479 commands are unusual; they use the minibuffer to read the regular
480 expression even though they are invoked from the minibuffer. As with
481 incremental searching, an upper-case letter in the regular expression
482 makes the search case-sensitive (@pxref{Search Case}).
483
484 @ignore
485 We may change the precise way these commands read their arguments.
486 Perhaps they will search for a match for the string given so far in the
487 minibuffer; perhaps they will search for a literal match rather than a
488 regular expression match; perhaps they will only accept matches at the
489 beginning of a history element; perhaps they will read the string to
490 search for incrementally like @kbd{C-s}. To find out what interface is
491 actually available, type @kbd{C-h f previous-matching-history-element}.
492 @end ignore
493
494 All uses of the minibuffer record your input on a history list, but
495 there are separate history lists for different kinds of arguments.
496 For example, there is a list for file names, used by all the commands
497 that read file names. (As a special feature, this history list
498 records the absolute file name, even if the name you entered was not
499 absolute.)
500
501 There are several other specific history lists, including one for
502 buffer names, one for arguments of commands like @code{query-replace},
503 one used by @kbd{M-x} for command names, and one used by
504 @code{compile} for compilation commands. Finally, there is one
505 ``miscellaneous'' history list that most minibuffer arguments use.
506
507 @vindex history-length
508 The variable @code{history-length} specifies the maximum length of a
509 minibuffer history list; adding a new element deletes the oldest
510 element if the list gets too long. If the value of
511 @code{history-length} is @code{t}, though, there is no maximum length.
512
513 @vindex history-delete-duplicates
514 The variable @code{history-delete-duplicates} specifies whether to
515 delete duplicates in history. If it is @code{t}, adding a new element
516 deletes from the list all other elements that are equal to it.
517
518 @node Repetition
519 @section Repeating Minibuffer Commands
520 @cindex command history
521 @cindex history of commands
522
523 Every command that uses the minibuffer once is recorded on a special
524 history list, the @dfn{command history}, together with the values of
525 its arguments, so that you can repeat the entire command. In
526 particular, every use of @kbd{M-x} is recorded there, since @kbd{M-x}
527 uses the minibuffer to read the command name.
528
529 @findex list-command-history
530 @table @kbd
531 @item C-x @key{ESC} @key{ESC}
532 Re-execute a recent minibuffer command from the command history
533 (@code{repeat-complex-command}).
534 @item M-x list-command-history
535 Display the entire command history, showing all the commands
536 @kbd{C-x @key{ESC} @key{ESC}} can repeat, most recent first.
537 @end table
538
539 @kindex C-x ESC ESC
540 @findex repeat-complex-command
541 @kbd{C-x @key{ESC} @key{ESC}} is used to re-execute a recent command
542 that used the minibuffer. With no argument, it repeats the last such
543 command. A numeric argument specifies which command to repeat; 1
544 means the last one, 2 the previous, and so on.
545
546 @kbd{C-x @key{ESC} @key{ESC}} works by turning the previous command
547 into a Lisp expression and then entering a minibuffer initialized with
548 the text for that expression. Even if you don't understand Lisp
549 syntax, it will probably be obvious which command is displayed for
550 repetition. If you type just @key{RET}, that repeats the command
551 unchanged. You can also change the command by editing the Lisp
552 expression before you execute it. The repeated command is added to
553 the front of the command history unless it is identical to the most
554 recently item.
555
556 Once inside the minibuffer for @kbd{C-x @key{ESC} @key{ESC}}, you can
557 use the minibuffer history commands (@kbd{M-p}, @kbd{M-n}, @kbd{M-r},
558 @kbd{M-s}; @pxref{Minibuffer History}) to move through the history list
559 of saved entire commands. After finding the desired previous command,
560 you can edit its expression as usual and then repeat it by typing
561 @key{RET}.
562
563 @vindex isearch-resume-in-command-history
564 Incremental search does not, strictly speaking, use the minibuffer.
565 Therefore, although it behaves like a complex command, it normally
566 does not appear in the history list for @kbd{C-x @key{ESC} @key{ESC}}.
567 You can make incremental search commands appear in the history by
568 setting @code{isearch-resume-in-command-history} to a non-@code{nil}
569 value. @xref{Incremental Search}.
570
571 @vindex command-history
572 The list of previous minibuffer-using commands is stored as a Lisp
573 list in the variable @code{command-history}. Each element is a Lisp
574 expression which describes one command and its arguments. Lisp programs
575 can re-execute a command by calling @code{eval} with the
576 @code{command-history} element.
577
578 @ignore
579 arch-tag: ba913cfd-b70e-400f-b663-22b2c309227f
580 @end ignore