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1 @c -*-texinfo-*-
2 @c This is part of the GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.
3 @c Copyright (C) 1990-1995, 1998-1999, 2001-2012
4 @c Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5 @c See the file elisp.texi for copying conditions.
6 @node Minibuffers, Command Loop, Read and Print, Top
7 @chapter Minibuffers
8 @cindex arguments, reading
9 @cindex complex arguments
10 @cindex minibuffer
11
12 A @dfn{minibuffer} is a special buffer that Emacs commands use to
13 read arguments more complicated than the single numeric prefix
14 argument. These arguments include file names, buffer names, and
15 command names (as in @kbd{M-x}). The minibuffer is displayed on the
16 bottom line of the frame, in the same place as the echo area
17 (@pxref{The Echo Area}), but only while it is in use for reading an
18 argument.
19
20 @menu
21 * Intro to Minibuffers:: Basic information about minibuffers.
22 * Text from Minibuffer:: How to read a straight text string.
23 * Object from Minibuffer:: How to read a Lisp object or expression.
24 * Minibuffer History:: Recording previous minibuffer inputs
25 so the user can reuse them.
26 * Initial Input:: Specifying initial contents for the minibuffer.
27 * Completion:: How to invoke and customize completion.
28 * Yes-or-No Queries:: Asking a question with a simple answer.
29 * Multiple Queries:: Asking a series of similar questions.
30 * Reading a Password:: Reading a password from the terminal.
31 * Minibuffer Commands:: Commands used as key bindings in minibuffers.
32 * Minibuffer Windows:: Operating on the special minibuffer windows.
33 * Minibuffer Contents:: How such commands access the minibuffer text.
34 * Recursive Mini:: Whether recursive entry to minibuffer is allowed.
35 * Minibuffer Misc:: Various customization hooks and variables.
36 @end menu
37
38 @node Intro to Minibuffers
39 @section Introduction to Minibuffers
40
41 In most ways, a minibuffer is a normal Emacs buffer. Most operations
42 @emph{within} a buffer, such as editing commands, work normally in a
43 minibuffer. However, many operations for managing buffers do not apply
44 to minibuffers. The name of a minibuffer always has the form @w{@samp{
45 *Minibuf-@var{number}*}}, and it cannot be changed. Minibuffers are
46 displayed only in special windows used only for minibuffers; these
47 windows always appear at the bottom of a frame. (Sometimes frames have
48 no minibuffer window, and sometimes a special kind of frame contains
49 nothing but a minibuffer window; see @ref{Minibuffers and Frames}.)
50
51 The text in the minibuffer always starts with the @dfn{prompt string},
52 the text that was specified by the program that is using the minibuffer
53 to tell the user what sort of input to type. This text is marked
54 read-only so you won't accidentally delete or change it. It is also
55 marked as a field (@pxref{Fields}), so that certain motion functions,
56 including @code{beginning-of-line}, @code{forward-word},
57 @code{forward-sentence}, and @code{forward-paragraph}, stop at the
58 boundary between the prompt and the actual text.
59
60 @c See http://debbugs.gnu.org/11276
61 The minibuffer's window is normally a single line; it grows
62 automatically if the contents require more space. Whilst it is
63 active, you can explicitly resize it temporarily with the window
64 sizing commands; it reverts to its normal size when the minibuffer is
65 exited. When the minibuffer is not active, you can resize it
66 permanently by using the window sizing commands in the frame's other
67 window, or dragging the mode line with the mouse. (Due to details of
68 the current implementation, for this to work @code{resize-mini-windows}
69 must be @code{nil}.) If the frame contains just a minibuffer, you can
70 change the minibuffer's size by changing the frame's size.
71
72 Use of the minibuffer reads input events, and that alters the values
73 of variables such as @code{this-command} and @code{last-command}
74 (@pxref{Command Loop Info}). Your program should bind them around the
75 code that uses the minibuffer, if you do not want that to change them.
76
77 Under some circumstances, a command can use a minibuffer even if
78 there is an active minibuffer; such a minibuffer is called a
79 @dfn{recursive minibuffer}. The first minibuffer is named
80 @w{@samp{ *Minibuf-1*}}. Recursive minibuffers are named by
81 incrementing the number at the end of the name. (The names begin with
82 a space so that they won't show up in normal buffer lists.) Of
83 several recursive minibuffers, the innermost (or most recently
84 entered) is the active minibuffer. We usually call this ``the''
85 minibuffer. You can permit or forbid recursive minibuffers by setting
86 the variable @code{enable-recursive-minibuffers}, or by putting
87 properties of that name on command symbols (@xref{Recursive Mini}.)
88
89 Like other buffers, a minibuffer uses a local keymap
90 (@pxref{Keymaps}) to specify special key bindings. The function that
91 invokes the minibuffer also sets up its local map according to the job
92 to be done. @xref{Text from Minibuffer}, for the non-completion
93 minibuffer local maps. @xref{Completion Commands}, for the minibuffer
94 local maps for completion.
95
96 @cindex inactive minibuffer
97 When a minibuffer is inactive, its major mode is
98 @code{minibuffer-inactive-mode}, with keymap
99 @code{minibuffer-inactive-mode-map}. This is only really useful if
100 the minibuffer is in a separate frame. @xref{Minibuffers and Frames}.
101
102 When Emacs is running in batch mode, any request to read from the
103 minibuffer actually reads a line from the standard input descriptor that
104 was supplied when Emacs was started.
105
106 @node Text from Minibuffer
107 @section Reading Text Strings with the Minibuffer
108
109 The most basic primitive for minibuffer input is
110 @code{read-from-minibuffer}, which can be used to read either a string
111 or a Lisp object in textual form. The function @code{read-regexp} is
112 used for reading regular expressions (@pxref{Regular Expressions}),
113 which are a special kind of string. There are also specialized
114 functions for reading commands, variables, file names, etc.@:
115 (@pxref{Completion}).
116
117 In most cases, you should not call minibuffer input functions in the
118 middle of a Lisp function. Instead, do all minibuffer input as part of
119 reading the arguments for a command, in the @code{interactive}
120 specification. @xref{Defining Commands}.
121
122 @defun read-from-minibuffer prompt &optional initial keymap read history default inherit-input-method
123 This function is the most general way to get input from the
124 minibuffer. By default, it accepts arbitrary text and returns it as a
125 string; however, if @var{read} is non-@code{nil}, then it uses
126 @code{read} to convert the text into a Lisp object (@pxref{Input
127 Functions}).
128
129 The first thing this function does is to activate a minibuffer and
130 display it with @var{prompt} (which must be a string) as the
131 prompt. Then the user can edit text in the minibuffer.
132
133 When the user types a command to exit the minibuffer,
134 @code{read-from-minibuffer} constructs the return value from the text in
135 the minibuffer. Normally it returns a string containing that text.
136 However, if @var{read} is non-@code{nil}, @code{read-from-minibuffer}
137 reads the text and returns the resulting Lisp object, unevaluated.
138 (@xref{Input Functions}, for information about reading.)
139
140 The argument @var{default} specifies default values to make available
141 through the history commands. It should be a string, a list of
142 strings, or @code{nil}. The string or strings become the minibuffer's
143 ``future history'', available to the user with @kbd{M-n}.
144
145 If @var{read} is non-@code{nil}, then @var{default} is also used
146 as the input to @code{read}, if the user enters empty input.
147 If @var{default} is a list of strings, the first string is used as the input.
148 If @var{default} is @code{nil}, empty input results in an @code{end-of-file} error.
149 However, in the usual case (where @var{read} is @code{nil}),
150 @code{read-from-minibuffer} ignores @var{default} when the user enters
151 empty input and returns an empty string, @code{""}. In this respect,
152 it differs from all the other minibuffer input functions in this chapter.
153
154 If @var{keymap} is non-@code{nil}, that keymap is the local keymap to
155 use in the minibuffer. If @var{keymap} is omitted or @code{nil}, the
156 value of @code{minibuffer-local-map} is used as the keymap. Specifying
157 a keymap is the most important way to customize the minibuffer for
158 various applications such as completion.
159
160 The argument @var{history} specifies a history list variable to use
161 for saving the input and for history commands used in the minibuffer.
162 It defaults to @code{minibuffer-history}. You can optionally specify
163 a starting position in the history list as well. @xref{Minibuffer History}.
164
165 If the variable @code{minibuffer-allow-text-properties} is
166 non-@code{nil}, then the string that is returned includes whatever text
167 properties were present in the minibuffer. Otherwise all the text
168 properties are stripped when the value is returned.
169
170 If the argument @var{inherit-input-method} is non-@code{nil}, then the
171 minibuffer inherits the current input method (@pxref{Input Methods}) and
172 the setting of @code{enable-multibyte-characters} (@pxref{Text
173 Representations}) from whichever buffer was current before entering the
174 minibuffer.
175
176 Use of @var{initial} is mostly deprecated; we recommend using
177 a non-@code{nil} value only in conjunction with specifying a cons cell
178 for @var{history}. @xref{Initial Input}.
179 @end defun
180
181 @defun read-string prompt &optional initial history default inherit-input-method
182 This function reads a string from the minibuffer and returns it. The
183 arguments @var{prompt}, @var{initial}, @var{history} and
184 @var{inherit-input-method} are used as in @code{read-from-minibuffer}.
185 The keymap used is @code{minibuffer-local-map}.
186
187 The optional argument @var{default} is used as in
188 @code{read-from-minibuffer}, except that, if non-@code{nil}, it also
189 specifies a default value to return if the user enters null input. As
190 in @code{read-from-minibuffer} it should be a string, a list of
191 strings, or @code{nil}, which is equivalent to an empty string. When
192 @var{default} is a string, that string is the default value. When it
193 is a list of strings, the first string is the default value. (All
194 these strings are available to the user in the ``future minibuffer
195 history''.)
196
197 This function works by calling the
198 @code{read-from-minibuffer} function:
199
200 @smallexample
201 @group
202 (read-string @var{prompt} @var{initial} @var{history} @var{default} @var{inherit})
203 @equiv{}
204 (let ((value
205 (read-from-minibuffer @var{prompt} @var{initial} nil nil
206 @var{history} @var{default} @var{inherit})))
207 (if (and (equal value "") @var{default})
208 (if (consp @var{default}) (car @var{default}) @var{default})
209 value))
210 @end group
211 @end smallexample
212 @end defun
213
214 @defun read-regexp prompt &optional default
215 This function reads a regular expression as a string from the
216 minibuffer and returns it. The argument @var{prompt} is used as in
217 @code{read-from-minibuffer}. The keymap used is
218 @code{minibuffer-local-map}, and @code{regexp-history} is used as the
219 history list (@pxref{Minibuffer History, regexp-history}).
220
221 The optional argument @var{default} specifies a default value to
222 return if the user enters null input; it should be a string, or
223 @code{nil}, which is equivalent to an empty string.
224
225 In addition, @code{read-regexp} collects a few useful candidates for
226 input and passes them to @code{read-from-minibuffer}, to make them
227 available to the user as the ``future minibuffer history list''
228 (@pxref{Minibuffer History, future list,, emacs, The GNU Emacs
229 Manual}). These candidates are:
230
231 @itemize @minus
232 @item
233 The word or symbol at point.
234 @item
235 The last regexp used in an incremental search.
236 @item
237 The last string used in an incremental search.
238 @item
239 The last string or pattern used in query-replace commands.
240 @end itemize
241
242 This function works by calling the @code{read-from-minibuffer}
243 function, after computing the list of defaults as described above.
244 @end defun
245
246 @defvar minibuffer-allow-text-properties
247 If this variable is @code{nil}, then @code{read-from-minibuffer}
248 and @code{read-string} strip all text properties from the minibuffer
249 input before returning it. However,
250 @code{read-no-blanks-input} (see below), as well as
251 @code{read-minibuffer} and related functions (@pxref{Object from
252 Minibuffer,, Reading Lisp Objects With the Minibuffer}), and all
253 functions that do minibuffer input with completion, discard text
254 properties unconditionally, regardless of the value of this variable.
255 @end defvar
256
257 @defvar minibuffer-local-map
258 This
259 @anchor{Definition of minibuffer-local-map}
260 @c avoid page break at anchor; work around Texinfo deficiency
261 is the default local keymap for reading from the minibuffer. By
262 default, it makes the following bindings:
263
264 @table @asis
265 @item @kbd{C-j}
266 @code{exit-minibuffer}
267
268 @item @key{RET}
269 @code{exit-minibuffer}
270
271 @item @kbd{C-g}
272 @code{abort-recursive-edit}
273
274 @item @kbd{M-n}
275 @itemx @key{DOWN}
276 @code{next-history-element}
277
278 @item @kbd{M-p}
279 @itemx @key{UP}
280 @code{previous-history-element}
281
282 @item @kbd{M-s}
283 @code{next-matching-history-element}
284
285 @item @kbd{M-r}
286 @code{previous-matching-history-element}
287
288 @ignore
289 @c Does not seem worth/appropriate mentioning.
290 @item @kbd{C-@key{TAB}}
291 @code{file-cache-minibuffer-complete}
292 @end ignore
293 @end table
294 @end defvar
295
296 @c In version 18, initial is required
297 @c Emacs 19 feature
298 @defun read-no-blanks-input prompt &optional initial inherit-input-method
299 This function reads a string from the minibuffer, but does not allow
300 whitespace characters as part of the input: instead, those characters
301 terminate the input. The arguments @var{prompt}, @var{initial}, and
302 @var{inherit-input-method} are used as in @code{read-from-minibuffer}.
303
304 This is a simplified interface to the @code{read-from-minibuffer}
305 function, and passes the value of the @code{minibuffer-local-ns-map}
306 keymap as the @var{keymap} argument for that function. Since the keymap
307 @code{minibuffer-local-ns-map} does not rebind @kbd{C-q}, it @emph{is}
308 possible to put a space into the string, by quoting it.
309
310 This function discards text properties, regardless of the value of
311 @code{minibuffer-allow-text-properties}.
312
313 @smallexample
314 @group
315 (read-no-blanks-input @var{prompt} @var{initial})
316 @equiv{}
317 (let (minibuffer-allow-text-properties)
318 (read-from-minibuffer @var{prompt} @var{initial} minibuffer-local-ns-map))
319 @end group
320 @end smallexample
321 @end defun
322
323 @c Slightly unfortunate name, suggesting it might be related to the
324 @c Nextstep port...
325 @defvar minibuffer-local-ns-map
326 This built-in variable is the keymap used as the minibuffer local keymap
327 in the function @code{read-no-blanks-input}. By default, it makes the
328 following bindings, in addition to those of @code{minibuffer-local-map}:
329
330 @table @asis
331 @item @key{SPC}
332 @cindex @key{SPC} in minibuffer
333 @code{exit-minibuffer}
334
335 @item @key{TAB}
336 @cindex @key{TAB} in minibuffer
337 @code{exit-minibuffer}
338
339 @item @kbd{?}
340 @cindex @kbd{?} in minibuffer
341 @code{self-insert-and-exit}
342 @end table
343 @end defvar
344
345 @node Object from Minibuffer
346 @section Reading Lisp Objects with the Minibuffer
347
348 This section describes functions for reading Lisp objects with the
349 minibuffer.
350
351 @defun read-minibuffer prompt &optional initial
352 This function reads a Lisp object using the minibuffer, and returns it
353 without evaluating it. The arguments @var{prompt} and @var{initial} are
354 used as in @code{read-from-minibuffer}.
355
356 This is a simplified interface to the
357 @code{read-from-minibuffer} function:
358
359 @smallexample
360 @group
361 (read-minibuffer @var{prompt} @var{initial})
362 @equiv{}
363 (let (minibuffer-allow-text-properties)
364 (read-from-minibuffer @var{prompt} @var{initial} nil t))
365 @end group
366 @end smallexample
367
368 Here is an example in which we supply the string @code{"(testing)"} as
369 initial input:
370
371 @smallexample
372 @group
373 (read-minibuffer
374 "Enter an expression: " (format "%s" '(testing)))
375
376 ;; @r{Here is how the minibuffer is displayed:}
377 @end group
378
379 @group
380 ---------- Buffer: Minibuffer ----------
381 Enter an expression: (testing)@point{}
382 ---------- Buffer: Minibuffer ----------
383 @end group
384 @end smallexample
385
386 @noindent
387 The user can type @key{RET} immediately to use the initial input as a
388 default, or can edit the input.
389 @end defun
390
391 @defun eval-minibuffer prompt &optional initial
392 This function reads a Lisp expression using the minibuffer, evaluates
393 it, then returns the result. The arguments @var{prompt} and
394 @var{initial} are used as in @code{read-from-minibuffer}.
395
396 This function simply evaluates the result of a call to
397 @code{read-minibuffer}:
398
399 @smallexample
400 @group
401 (eval-minibuffer @var{prompt} @var{initial})
402 @equiv{}
403 (eval (read-minibuffer @var{prompt} @var{initial}))
404 @end group
405 @end smallexample
406 @end defun
407
408 @defun edit-and-eval-command prompt form
409 This function reads a Lisp expression in the minibuffer, evaluates it,
410 then returns the result. The difference between this command and
411 @code{eval-minibuffer} is that here the initial @var{form} is not
412 optional and it is treated as a Lisp object to be converted to printed
413 representation rather than as a string of text. It is printed with
414 @code{prin1}, so if it is a string, double-quote characters (@samp{"})
415 appear in the initial text. @xref{Output Functions}.
416
417 In the following example, we offer the user an expression with initial
418 text that is already a valid form:
419
420 @smallexample
421 @group
422 (edit-and-eval-command "Please edit: " '(forward-word 1))
423
424 ;; @r{After evaluation of the preceding expression,}
425 ;; @r{the following appears in the minibuffer:}
426 @end group
427
428 @group
429 ---------- Buffer: Minibuffer ----------
430 Please edit: (forward-word 1)@point{}
431 ---------- Buffer: Minibuffer ----------
432 @end group
433 @end smallexample
434
435 @noindent
436 Typing @key{RET} right away would exit the minibuffer and evaluate the
437 expression, thus moving point forward one word.
438 @end defun
439
440 @node Minibuffer History
441 @section Minibuffer History
442 @cindex minibuffer history
443 @cindex history list
444
445 A @dfn{minibuffer history list} records previous minibuffer inputs
446 so the user can reuse them conveniently. It is a variable whose value
447 is a list of strings (previous inputs), most recent first.
448
449 There are many separate minibuffer history lists, used for different
450 kinds of inputs. It's the Lisp programmer's job to specify the right
451 history list for each use of the minibuffer.
452
453 You specify a minibuffer history list with the optional @var{history}
454 argument to @code{read-from-minibuffer} or @code{completing-read}.
455 Here are the possible values for it:
456
457 @table @asis
458 @item @var{variable}
459 Use @var{variable} (a symbol) as the history list.
460
461 @item (@var{variable} . @var{startpos})
462 Use @var{variable} (a symbol) as the history list, and assume that the
463 initial history position is @var{startpos} (a nonnegative integer).
464
465 Specifying 0 for @var{startpos} is equivalent to just specifying the
466 symbol @var{variable}. @code{previous-history-element} will display
467 the most recent element of the history list in the minibuffer. If you
468 specify a positive @var{startpos}, the minibuffer history functions
469 behave as if @code{(elt @var{variable} (1- @var{startpos}))} were the
470 history element currently shown in the minibuffer.
471
472 For consistency, you should also specify that element of the history
473 as the initial minibuffer contents, using the @var{initial} argument
474 to the minibuffer input function (@pxref{Initial Input}).
475 @end table
476
477 If you don't specify @var{history}, then the default history list
478 @code{minibuffer-history} is used. For other standard history lists,
479 see below. You can also create your own history list variable; just
480 initialize it to @code{nil} before the first use.
481
482 Both @code{read-from-minibuffer} and @code{completing-read} add new
483 elements to the history list automatically, and provide commands to
484 allow the user to reuse items on the list. The only thing your program
485 needs to do to use a history list is to initialize it and to pass its
486 name to the input functions when you wish. But it is safe to modify the
487 list by hand when the minibuffer input functions are not using it.
488
489 Emacs functions that add a new element to a history list can also
490 delete old elements if the list gets too long. The variable
491 @code{history-length} specifies the maximum length for most history
492 lists. To specify a different maximum length for a particular history
493 list, put the length in the @code{history-length} property of the
494 history list symbol. The variable @code{history-delete-duplicates}
495 specifies whether to delete duplicates in history.
496
497 @defun add-to-history history-var newelt &optional maxelt keep-all
498 This function adds a new element @var{newelt}, if it isn't the empty
499 string, to the history list stored in the variable @var{history-var},
500 and returns the updated history list. It limits the list length to
501 the value of @var{maxelt} (if non-@code{nil}) or @code{history-length}
502 (described below). The possible values of @var{maxelt} have the same
503 meaning as the values of @code{history-length}.
504
505 Normally, @code{add-to-history} removes duplicate members from the
506 history list if @code{history-delete-duplicates} is non-@code{nil}.
507 However, if @var{keep-all} is non-@code{nil}, that says not to remove
508 duplicates, and to add @var{newelt} to the list even if it is empty.
509 @end defun
510
511 @defvar history-add-new-input
512 If the value of this variable is @code{nil}, standard functions that
513 read from the minibuffer don't add new elements to the history list.
514 This lets Lisp programs explicitly manage input history by using
515 @code{add-to-history}. The default value is @code{t}.
516 @end defvar
517
518 @defopt history-length
519 The value of this variable specifies the maximum length for all
520 history lists that don't specify their own maximum lengths. If the
521 value is @code{t}, that means there is no maximum (don't delete old
522 elements). If a history list variable's symbol has a non-@code{nil}
523 @code{history-length} property, it overrides this variable for that
524 particular history list.
525 @end defopt
526
527 @defopt history-delete-duplicates
528 If the value of this variable is @code{t}, that means when adding a
529 new history element, all previous identical elements are deleted.
530 @end defopt
531
532 Here are some of the standard minibuffer history list variables:
533
534 @defvar minibuffer-history
535 The default history list for minibuffer history input.
536 @end defvar
537
538 @defvar query-replace-history
539 A history list for arguments to @code{query-replace} (and similar
540 arguments to other commands).
541 @end defvar
542
543 @defvar file-name-history
544 A history list for file-name arguments.
545 @end defvar
546
547 @defvar buffer-name-history
548 A history list for buffer-name arguments.
549 @end defvar
550
551 @defvar regexp-history
552 A history list for regular expression arguments.
553 @end defvar
554
555 @defvar extended-command-history
556 A history list for arguments that are names of extended commands.
557 @end defvar
558
559 @defvar shell-command-history
560 A history list for arguments that are shell commands.
561 @end defvar
562
563 @defvar read-expression-history
564 A history list for arguments that are Lisp expressions to evaluate.
565 @end defvar
566
567 @defvar face-name-history
568 A history list for arguments that are faces.
569 @end defvar
570
571 @c Less common: coding-system-history, input-method-history,
572 @c command-history, grep-history, grep-find-history,
573 @c read-envvar-name-history, setenv-history, yes-or-no-p-history.
574
575 @node Initial Input
576 @section Initial Input
577
578 Several of the functions for minibuffer input have an argument called
579 @var{initial}. This is a mostly-deprecated
580 feature for specifying that the minibuffer should start out with
581 certain text, instead of empty as usual.
582
583 If @var{initial} is a string, the minibuffer starts out containing the
584 text of the string, with point at the end, when the user starts to
585 edit the text. If the user simply types @key{RET} to exit the
586 minibuffer, it will use the initial input string to determine the
587 value to return.
588
589 @strong{We discourage use of a non-@code{nil} value for
590 @var{initial}}, because initial input is an intrusive interface.
591 History lists and default values provide a much more convenient method
592 to offer useful default inputs to the user.
593
594 There is just one situation where you should specify a string for an
595 @var{initial} argument. This is when you specify a cons cell for the
596 @var{history} argument. @xref{Minibuffer History}.
597
598 @var{initial} can also be a cons cell of the form @code{(@var{string}
599 . @var{position})}. This means to insert @var{string} in the
600 minibuffer but put point at @var{position} within the string's text.
601
602 As a historical accident, @var{position} was implemented
603 inconsistently in different functions. In @code{completing-read},
604 @var{position}'s value is interpreted as origin-zero; that is, a value
605 of 0 means the beginning of the string, 1 means after the first
606 character, etc. In @code{read-minibuffer}, and the other
607 non-completion minibuffer input functions that support this argument,
608 1 means the beginning of the string, 2 means after the first character,
609 etc.
610
611 Use of a cons cell as the value for @var{initial} arguments is deprecated.
612
613 @node Completion
614 @section Completion
615 @cindex completion
616
617 @dfn{Completion} is a feature that fills in the rest of a name
618 starting from an abbreviation for it. Completion works by comparing the
619 user's input against a list of valid names and determining how much of
620 the name is determined uniquely by what the user has typed. For
621 example, when you type @kbd{C-x b} (@code{switch-to-buffer}) and then
622 @c "This is the sort of English up with which I will not put."
623 type the first few letters of the name of the buffer to which you wish
624 to switch, and then type @key{TAB} (@code{minibuffer-complete}), Emacs
625 extends the name as far as it can.
626
627 Standard Emacs commands offer completion for names of symbols, files,
628 buffers, and processes; with the functions in this section, you can
629 implement completion for other kinds of names.
630
631 The @code{try-completion} function is the basic primitive for
632 completion: it returns the longest determined completion of a given
633 initial string, with a given set of strings to match against.
634
635 The function @code{completing-read} provides a higher-level interface
636 for completion. A call to @code{completing-read} specifies how to
637 determine the list of valid names. The function then activates the
638 minibuffer with a local keymap that binds a few keys to commands useful
639 for completion. Other functions provide convenient simple interfaces
640 for reading certain kinds of names with completion.
641
642 @menu
643 * Basic Completion:: Low-level functions for completing strings.
644 * Minibuffer Completion:: Invoking the minibuffer with completion.
645 * Completion Commands:: Minibuffer commands that do completion.
646 * High-Level Completion:: Convenient special cases of completion
647 (reading buffer names, variable names, etc.).
648 * Reading File Names:: Using completion to read file names and
649 shell commands.
650 * Completion Variables:: Variables controlling completion behavior.
651 * Programmed Completion:: Writing your own completion function.
652 * Completion in Buffers:: Completing text in ordinary buffers.
653 @end menu
654
655 @node Basic Completion
656 @subsection Basic Completion Functions
657
658 The following completion functions have nothing in themselves to do
659 with minibuffers. We describe them here to keep them near the
660 higher-level completion features that do use the minibuffer.
661
662 @defun try-completion string collection &optional predicate
663 This function returns the longest common substring of all possible
664 completions of @var{string} in @var{collection}.
665
666 @cindex completion table
667 The @var{collection} argument is called the @dfn{completion table}.
668 Its value must be a list of strings, an alist whose keys are strings
669 or symbols, an obarray, a hash table, or a completion function.
670
671 Completion compares @var{string} against each of the permissible
672 completions specified by @var{collection}. If no permissible
673 completions match, @code{try-completion} returns @code{nil}. If there
674 is just one matching completion, and the match is exact, it returns
675 @code{t}. Otherwise, it returns the longest initial sequence common
676 to all possible matching completions.
677
678 If @var{collection} is an alist (@pxref{Association Lists}), the
679 permissible completions are the elements of the alist that are either
680 strings, or conses whose @sc{car} is a string or symbol.
681 Symbols are converted to strings using @code{symbol-name}. Other
682 elements of the alist are ignored. (Remember that in Emacs Lisp, the
683 elements of alists do not @emph{have} to be conses.) In particular, a
684 list of strings is allowed, even though we usually do not
685 think of such lists as alists.
686
687 @cindex obarray in completion
688 If @var{collection} is an obarray (@pxref{Creating Symbols}), the names
689 of all symbols in the obarray form the set of permissible completions.
690
691 If @var{collection} is a hash table, then the keys that are strings
692 are the possible completions. Other keys are ignored.
693
694 You can also use a function as @var{collection}. Then the function is
695 solely responsible for performing completion; @code{try-completion}
696 returns whatever this function returns. The function is called with
697 three arguments: @var{string}, @var{predicate} and @code{nil} (the
698 third argument is so that the same function can be used
699 in @code{all-completions} and do the appropriate thing in either
700 case). @xref{Programmed Completion}.
701
702 If the argument @var{predicate} is non-@code{nil}, then it must be a
703 function of one argument, unless @var{collection} is a hash table, in
704 which case it should be a function of two arguments. It is used to
705 test each possible match, and the match is accepted only if
706 @var{predicate} returns non-@code{nil}. The argument given to
707 @var{predicate} is either a string or a cons cell (the @sc{car} of
708 which is a string) from the alist, or a symbol (@emph{not} a symbol
709 name) from the obarray. If @var{collection} is a hash table,
710 @var{predicate} is called with two arguments, the string key and the
711 associated value.
712
713 In addition, to be acceptable, a completion must also match all the
714 regular expressions in @code{completion-regexp-list}. (Unless
715 @var{collection} is a function, in which case that function has to
716 handle @code{completion-regexp-list} itself.)
717
718 In the first of the following examples, the string @samp{foo} is
719 matched by three of the alist @sc{car}s. All of the matches begin with
720 the characters @samp{fooba}, so that is the result. In the second
721 example, there is only one possible match, and it is exact, so the
722 return value is @code{t}.
723
724 @smallexample
725 @group
726 (try-completion
727 "foo"
728 '(("foobar1" 1) ("barfoo" 2) ("foobaz" 3) ("foobar2" 4)))
729 @result{} "fooba"
730 @end group
731
732 @group
733 (try-completion "foo" '(("barfoo" 2) ("foo" 3)))
734 @result{} t
735 @end group
736 @end smallexample
737
738 In the following example, numerous symbols begin with the characters
739 @samp{forw}, and all of them begin with the word @samp{forward}. In
740 most of the symbols, this is followed with a @samp{-}, but not in all,
741 so no more than @samp{forward} can be completed.
742
743 @smallexample
744 @group
745 (try-completion "forw" obarray)
746 @result{} "forward"
747 @end group
748 @end smallexample
749
750 Finally, in the following example, only two of the three possible
751 matches pass the predicate @code{test} (the string @samp{foobaz} is
752 too short). Both of those begin with the string @samp{foobar}.
753
754 @smallexample
755 @group
756 (defun test (s)
757 (> (length (car s)) 6))
758 @result{} test
759 @end group
760 @group
761 (try-completion
762 "foo"
763 '(("foobar1" 1) ("barfoo" 2) ("foobaz" 3) ("foobar2" 4))
764 'test)
765 @result{} "foobar"
766 @end group
767 @end smallexample
768 @end defun
769
770 @c Removed obsolete argument nospace.
771 @defun all-completions string collection &optional predicate
772 This function returns a list of all possible completions of
773 @var{string}. The arguments to this function
774 @c (aside from @var{nospace})
775 are the same as those of @code{try-completion}, and it
776 uses @code{completion-regexp-list} in the same way that
777 @code{try-completion} does.
778
779 @ignore
780 The optional argument @var{nospace} is obsolete. If it is
781 non-@code{nil}, completions that start with a space are ignored unless
782 @var{string} starts with a space.
783 @end ignore
784
785 If @var{collection} is a function, it is called with three arguments:
786 @var{string}, @var{predicate} and @code{t}; then @code{all-completions}
787 returns whatever the function returns. @xref{Programmed Completion}.
788
789 Here is an example, using the function @code{test} shown in the
790 example for @code{try-completion}:
791
792 @smallexample
793 @group
794 (defun test (s)
795 (> (length (car s)) 6))
796 @result{} test
797 @end group
798
799 @group
800 (all-completions
801 "foo"
802 '(("foobar1" 1) ("barfoo" 2) ("foobaz" 3) ("foobar2" 4))
803 'test)
804 @result{} ("foobar1" "foobar2")
805 @end group
806 @end smallexample
807 @end defun
808
809 @defun test-completion string collection &optional predicate
810 @anchor{Definition of test-completion}
811 This function returns non-@code{nil} if @var{string} is a valid
812 completion alternative specified by @var{collection} and
813 @var{predicate}. The arguments are the same as in
814 @code{try-completion}. For instance, if @var{collection} is a list of
815 strings, this is true if @var{string} appears in the list and
816 @var{predicate} is satisfied.
817
818 This function uses @code{completion-regexp-list} in the same
819 way that @code{try-completion} does.
820
821 If @var{predicate} is non-@code{nil} and if @var{collection} contains
822 several strings that are equal to each other, as determined by
823 @code{compare-strings} according to @code{completion-ignore-case},
824 then @var{predicate} should accept either all or none of them.
825 Otherwise, the return value of @code{test-completion} is essentially
826 unpredictable.
827
828 If @var{collection} is a function, it is called with three arguments,
829 the values @var{string}, @var{predicate} and @code{lambda}; whatever
830 it returns, @code{test-completion} returns in turn.
831 @end defun
832
833 @defun completion-boundaries string collection predicate suffix
834 This function returns the boundaries of the field on which @var{collection}
835 will operate, assuming that @var{string} holds the text before point
836 and @var{suffix} holds the text after point.
837
838 Normally completion operates on the whole string, so for all normal
839 collections, this will always return @code{(0 . (length
840 @var{suffix}))}. But more complex completion such as completion on
841 files is done one field at a time. For example, completion of
842 @code{"/usr/sh"} will include @code{"/usr/share/"} but not
843 @code{"/usr/share/doc"} even if @code{"/usr/share/doc"} exists.
844 Also @code{all-completions} on @code{"/usr/sh"} will not include
845 @code{"/usr/share/"} but only @code{"share/"}. So if @var{string} is
846 @code{"/usr/sh"} and @var{suffix} is @code{"e/doc"},
847 @code{completion-boundaries} will return @code{(5 . 1)} which tells us
848 that the @var{collection} will only return completion information that
849 pertains to the area after @code{"/usr/"} and before @code{"/doc"}.
850 @end defun
851
852 If you store a completion alist in a variable, you should mark the
853 variable as ``risky'' by giving it a non-@code{nil}
854 @code{risky-local-variable} property. @xref{File Local Variables}.
855
856 @defvar completion-ignore-case
857 If the value of this variable is non-@code{nil}, case is not
858 considered significant in completion. Within @code{read-file-name},
859 this variable is overridden by
860 @code{read-file-name-completion-ignore-case} (@pxref{Reading File
861 Names}); within @code{read-buffer}, it is overridden by
862 @code{read-buffer-completion-ignore-case} (@pxref{High-Level
863 Completion}).
864 @end defvar
865
866 @defvar completion-regexp-list
867 This is a list of regular expressions. The completion functions only
868 consider a completion acceptable if it matches all regular expressions
869 in this list, with @code{case-fold-search} (@pxref{Searching and Case})
870 bound to the value of @code{completion-ignore-case}.
871 @end defvar
872
873 @defmac lazy-completion-table var fun
874 This macro provides a way to initialize the variable @var{var} as a
875 collection for completion in a lazy way, not computing its actual
876 contents until they are first needed. You use this macro to produce a
877 value that you store in @var{var}. The actual computation of the
878 proper value is done the first time you do completion using @var{var}.
879 It is done by calling @var{fun} with no arguments. The
880 value @var{fun} returns becomes the permanent value of @var{var}.
881
882 Here is an example:
883
884 @smallexample
885 (defvar foo (lazy-completion-table foo make-my-alist))
886 @end smallexample
887 @end defmac
888
889 @node Minibuffer Completion
890 @subsection Completion and the Minibuffer
891 @cindex minibuffer completion
892 @cindex reading from minibuffer with completion
893
894 This section describes the basic interface for reading from the
895 minibuffer with completion.
896
897 @defun completing-read prompt collection &optional predicate require-match initial history default inherit-input-method
898 This function reads a string in the minibuffer, assisting the user by
899 providing completion. It activates the minibuffer with prompt
900 @var{prompt}, which must be a string.
901
902 The actual completion is done by passing the completion table
903 @var{collection} and the completion predicate @var{predicate} to the
904 function @code{try-completion} (@pxref{Basic Completion}). This
905 happens in certain commands bound in the local keymaps used for
906 completion. Some of these commands also call @code{test-completion}.
907 Thus, if @var{predicate} is non-@code{nil}, it should be compatible
908 with @var{collection} and @code{completion-ignore-case}.
909 @xref{Definition of test-completion}.
910
911 The value of the optional argument @var{require-match} determines how
912 the user may exit the minibuffer:
913
914 @itemize @bullet
915 @item
916 If @code{nil}, the usual minibuffer exit commands work regardless of
917 the input in the minibuffer.
918
919 @item
920 If @code{t}, the usual minibuffer exit commands won't exit unless the
921 input completes to an element of @var{collection}.
922
923 @item
924 If @code{confirm}, the user can exit with any input, but is asked for
925 confirmation if the input is not an element of @var{collection}.
926
927 @item
928 If @code{confirm-after-completion}, the user can exit with any input,
929 but is asked for confirmation if the preceding command was a
930 completion command (i.e., one of the commands in
931 @code{minibuffer-confirm-exit-commands}) and the resulting input is
932 not an element of @var{collection}. @xref{Completion Commands}.
933
934 @item
935 Any other value of @var{require-match} behaves like @code{t}, except
936 that the exit commands won't exit if it performs completion.
937 @end itemize
938
939 However, empty input is always permitted, regardless of the value of
940 @var{require-match}; in that case, @code{completing-read} returns the
941 first element of @var{default}, if it is a list; @code{""}, if
942 @var{default} is @code{nil}; or @var{default}. The string or strings
943 in @var{default} are also available to the user through the history
944 commands.
945
946 The function @code{completing-read} uses
947 @code{minibuffer-local-completion-map} as the keymap if
948 @var{require-match} is @code{nil}, and uses
949 @code{minibuffer-local-must-match-map} if @var{require-match} is
950 non-@code{nil}. @xref{Completion Commands}.
951
952 The argument @var{history} specifies which history list variable to use for
953 saving the input and for minibuffer history commands. It defaults to
954 @code{minibuffer-history}. @xref{Minibuffer History}.
955
956 The argument @var{initial} is mostly deprecated; we recommend using a
957 non-@code{nil} value only in conjunction with specifying a cons cell
958 for @var{history}. @xref{Initial Input}. For default input, use
959 @var{default} instead.
960
961 If the argument @var{inherit-input-method} is non-@code{nil}, then the
962 minibuffer inherits the current input method (@pxref{Input
963 Methods}) and the setting of @code{enable-multibyte-characters}
964 (@pxref{Text Representations}) from whichever buffer was current before
965 entering the minibuffer.
966
967 If the variable @code{completion-ignore-case} is
968 non-@code{nil}, completion ignores case when comparing the input
969 against the possible matches. @xref{Basic Completion}. In this mode
970 of operation, @var{predicate} must also ignore case, or you will get
971 surprising results.
972
973 Here's an example of using @code{completing-read}:
974
975 @smallexample
976 @group
977 (completing-read
978 "Complete a foo: "
979 '(("foobar1" 1) ("barfoo" 2) ("foobaz" 3) ("foobar2" 4))
980 nil t "fo")
981 @end group
982
983 @group
984 ;; @r{After evaluation of the preceding expression,}
985 ;; @r{the following appears in the minibuffer:}
986
987 ---------- Buffer: Minibuffer ----------
988 Complete a foo: fo@point{}
989 ---------- Buffer: Minibuffer ----------
990 @end group
991 @end smallexample
992
993 @noindent
994 If the user then types @kbd{@key{DEL} @key{DEL} b @key{RET}},
995 @code{completing-read} returns @code{barfoo}.
996
997 The @code{completing-read} function binds variables to pass
998 information to the commands that actually do completion.
999 They are described in the following section.
1000 @end defun
1001
1002 @defvar completing-read-function
1003 The value of this variable must be a function, which is called by
1004 @code{completing-read} to actually do its work. It should accept the
1005 same arguments as @code{completing-read}. This can be bound to a
1006 different function to completely override the normal behavior of
1007 @code{completing-read}.
1008 @end defvar
1009
1010 @node Completion Commands
1011 @subsection Minibuffer Commands that Do Completion
1012
1013 This section describes the keymaps, commands and user options used
1014 in the minibuffer to do completion.
1015
1016 @defvar minibuffer-completion-table
1017 The value of this variable is the completion table used for completion
1018 in the minibuffer. This is the global variable that contains what
1019 @code{completing-read} passes to @code{try-completion}. It is used by
1020 minibuffer completion commands such as
1021 @code{minibuffer-complete-word}.
1022 @end defvar
1023
1024 @defvar minibuffer-completion-predicate
1025 This variable's value is the predicate that @code{completing-read}
1026 passes to @code{try-completion}. The variable is also used by the other
1027 minibuffer completion functions.
1028 @end defvar
1029
1030 @defvar minibuffer-completion-confirm
1031 This variable determines whether Emacs asks for confirmation before
1032 exiting the minibuffer; @code{completing-read} binds this variable,
1033 and the function @code{minibuffer-complete-and-exit} checks the value
1034 before exiting. If the value is @code{nil}, confirmation is not
1035 required. If the value is @code{confirm}, the user may exit with an
1036 input that is not a valid completion alternative, but Emacs asks for
1037 confirmation. If the value is @code{confirm-after-completion}, the
1038 user may exit with an input that is not a valid completion
1039 alternative, but Emacs asks for confirmation if the user submitted the
1040 input right after any of the completion commands in
1041 @code{minibuffer-confirm-exit-commands}.
1042 @end defvar
1043
1044 @defvar minibuffer-confirm-exit-commands
1045 This variable holds a list of commands that cause Emacs to ask for
1046 confirmation before exiting the minibuffer, if the @var{require-match}
1047 argument to @code{completing-read} is @code{confirm-after-completion}.
1048 The confirmation is requested if the user attempts to exit the
1049 minibuffer immediately after calling any command in this list.
1050 @end defvar
1051
1052 @deffn Command minibuffer-complete-word
1053 This function completes the minibuffer contents by at most a single
1054 word. Even if the minibuffer contents have only one completion,
1055 @code{minibuffer-complete-word} does not add any characters beyond the
1056 first character that is not a word constituent. @xref{Syntax Tables}.
1057 @end deffn
1058
1059 @deffn Command minibuffer-complete
1060 This function completes the minibuffer contents as far as possible.
1061 @end deffn
1062
1063 @deffn Command minibuffer-complete-and-exit
1064 This function completes the minibuffer contents, and exits if
1065 confirmation is not required, i.e., if
1066 @code{minibuffer-completion-confirm} is @code{nil}. If confirmation
1067 @emph{is} required, it is given by repeating this command
1068 immediately---the command is programmed to work without confirmation
1069 when run twice in succession.
1070 @end deffn
1071
1072 @deffn Command minibuffer-completion-help
1073 This function creates a list of the possible completions of the
1074 current minibuffer contents. It works by calling @code{all-completions}
1075 using the value of the variable @code{minibuffer-completion-table} as
1076 the @var{collection} argument, and the value of
1077 @code{minibuffer-completion-predicate} as the @var{predicate} argument.
1078 The list of completions is displayed as text in a buffer named
1079 @file{*Completions*}.
1080 @end deffn
1081
1082 @defun display-completion-list completions &optional common-substring
1083 This function displays @var{completions} to the stream in
1084 @code{standard-output}, usually a buffer. (@xref{Read and Print}, for more
1085 information about streams.) The argument @var{completions} is normally
1086 a list of completions just returned by @code{all-completions}, but it
1087 does not have to be. Each element may be a symbol or a string, either
1088 of which is simply printed. It can also be a list of two strings,
1089 which is printed as if the strings were concatenated. The first of
1090 the two strings is the actual completion, the second string serves as
1091 annotation.
1092
1093 The argument @var{common-substring} is the prefix that is common to
1094 all the completions. With normal Emacs completion, it is usually the
1095 same as the string that was completed. @code{display-completion-list}
1096 uses this to highlight text in the completion list for better visual
1097 feedback. This is not needed in the minibuffer; for minibuffer
1098 completion, you can pass @code{nil}.
1099
1100 This function is called by @code{minibuffer-completion-help}. A
1101 common way to use it is together with
1102 @code{with-output-to-temp-buffer}, like this:
1103
1104 @example
1105 (with-output-to-temp-buffer "*Completions*"
1106 (display-completion-list
1107 (all-completions (buffer-string) my-alist)
1108 (buffer-string)))
1109 @end example
1110 @end defun
1111
1112 @defopt completion-auto-help
1113 If this variable is non-@code{nil}, the completion commands
1114 automatically display a list of possible completions whenever nothing
1115 can be completed because the next character is not uniquely determined.
1116 @end defopt
1117
1118 @defvar minibuffer-local-completion-map
1119 @code{completing-read} uses this value as the local keymap when an
1120 exact match of one of the completions is not required. By default, this
1121 keymap makes the following bindings:
1122
1123 @table @asis
1124 @item @kbd{?}
1125 @code{minibuffer-completion-help}
1126
1127 @item @key{SPC}
1128 @code{minibuffer-complete-word}
1129
1130 @item @key{TAB}
1131 @code{minibuffer-complete}
1132 @end table
1133
1134 @noindent
1135 and uses @code{minibuffer-local-map} as its parent keymap
1136 (@pxref{Definition of minibuffer-local-map}).
1137 @end defvar
1138
1139 @defvar minibuffer-local-must-match-map
1140 @code{completing-read} uses this value as the local keymap when an
1141 exact match of one of the completions is required. Therefore, no keys
1142 are bound to @code{exit-minibuffer}, the command that exits the
1143 minibuffer unconditionally. By default, this keymap makes the following
1144 bindings:
1145
1146 @table @asis
1147 @item @kbd{C-j}
1148 @code{minibuffer-complete-and-exit}
1149
1150 @item @key{RET}
1151 @code{minibuffer-complete-and-exit}
1152 @end table
1153
1154 @noindent
1155 and uses @code{minibuffer-local-completion-map} as its parent keymap.
1156 @end defvar
1157
1158 @defvar minibuffer-local-filename-completion-map
1159 This is a sparse keymap that simply unbinds @key{SPC}; because
1160 filenames can contain spaces. The function @code{read-file-name}
1161 combines this keymap with either @code{minibuffer-local-completion-map}
1162 or @code{minibuffer-local-must-match-map}.
1163 @end defvar
1164
1165
1166 @node High-Level Completion
1167 @subsection High-Level Completion Functions
1168
1169 This section describes the higher-level convenience functions for
1170 reading certain sorts of names with completion.
1171
1172 In most cases, you should not call these functions in the middle of a
1173 Lisp function. When possible, do all minibuffer input as part of
1174 reading the arguments for a command, in the @code{interactive}
1175 specification. @xref{Defining Commands}.
1176
1177 @defun read-buffer prompt &optional default require-match
1178 This function reads the name of a buffer and returns it as a string.
1179 The argument @var{default} is the default name to use, the value to
1180 return if the user exits with an empty minibuffer. If non-@code{nil},
1181 it should be a string, a list of strings, or a buffer. If it is
1182 a list, the default value is the first element of this list. It is
1183 mentioned in the prompt, but is not inserted in the minibuffer as
1184 initial input.
1185
1186 The argument @var{prompt} should be a string ending with a colon and a
1187 space. If @var{default} is non-@code{nil}, the function inserts it in
1188 @var{prompt} before the colon to follow the convention for reading from
1189 the minibuffer with a default value (@pxref{Programming Tips}).
1190
1191 The optional argument @var{require-match} has the same meaning as in
1192 @code{completing-read}. @xref{Minibuffer Completion}.
1193
1194 In the following example, the user enters @samp{minibuffer.t}, and
1195 then types @key{RET}. The argument @var{require-match} is @code{t},
1196 and the only buffer name starting with the given input is
1197 @samp{minibuffer.texi}, so that name is the value.
1198
1199 @example
1200 (read-buffer "Buffer name: " "foo" t)
1201 @group
1202 ;; @r{After evaluation of the preceding expression,}
1203 ;; @r{the following prompt appears,}
1204 ;; @r{with an empty minibuffer:}
1205 @end group
1206
1207 @group
1208 ---------- Buffer: Minibuffer ----------
1209 Buffer name (default foo): @point{}
1210 ---------- Buffer: Minibuffer ----------
1211 @end group
1212
1213 @group
1214 ;; @r{The user types @kbd{minibuffer.t @key{RET}}.}
1215 @result{} "minibuffer.texi"
1216 @end group
1217 @end example
1218 @end defun
1219
1220 @defopt read-buffer-function
1221 This variable specifies how to read buffer names. The function is
1222 called with the arguments passed to @code{read-buffer}. For example,
1223 if you set this variable to @code{iswitchb-read-buffer}, all Emacs
1224 commands that call @code{read-buffer} to read a buffer name will
1225 actually use the @code{iswitchb} package to read it.
1226 @end defopt
1227
1228 @defopt read-buffer-completion-ignore-case
1229 If this variable is non-@code{nil}, @code{read-buffer} ignores case
1230 when performing completion.
1231 @end defopt
1232
1233 @defun read-command prompt &optional default
1234 This function reads the name of a command and returns it as a Lisp
1235 symbol. The argument @var{prompt} is used as in
1236 @code{read-from-minibuffer}. Recall that a command is anything for
1237 which @code{commandp} returns @code{t}, and a command name is a symbol
1238 for which @code{commandp} returns @code{t}. @xref{Interactive Call}.
1239
1240 The argument @var{default} specifies what to return if the user enters
1241 null input. It can be a symbol, a string or a list of strings. If it
1242 is a string, @code{read-command} interns it before returning it.
1243 If it is a list, @code{read-command} interns the first element of this list.
1244 If @var{default} is @code{nil}, that means no default has been
1245 specified; then if the user enters null input, the return value is
1246 @code{(intern "")}, that is, a symbol whose name is an empty string.
1247
1248 @example
1249 (read-command "Command name? ")
1250
1251 @group
1252 ;; @r{After evaluation of the preceding expression,}
1253 ;; @r{the following prompt appears with an empty minibuffer:}
1254 @end group
1255
1256 @group
1257 ---------- Buffer: Minibuffer ----------
1258 Command name?
1259 ---------- Buffer: Minibuffer ----------
1260 @end group
1261 @end example
1262
1263 @noindent
1264 If the user types @kbd{forward-c @key{RET}}, then this function returns
1265 @code{forward-char}.
1266
1267 The @code{read-command} function is a simplified interface to
1268 @code{completing-read}. It uses the variable @code{obarray} so as to
1269 complete in the set of extant Lisp symbols, and it uses the
1270 @code{commandp} predicate so as to accept only command names:
1271
1272 @cindex @code{commandp} example
1273 @example
1274 @group
1275 (read-command @var{prompt})
1276 @equiv{}
1277 (intern (completing-read @var{prompt} obarray
1278 'commandp t nil))
1279 @end group
1280 @end example
1281 @end defun
1282
1283 @defun read-variable prompt &optional default
1284 @anchor{Definition of read-variable}
1285 This function reads the name of a customizable variable and returns it
1286 as a symbol. Its arguments have the same form as those of
1287 @code{read-command}. It behaves just like @code{read-command}, except
1288 that it uses the predicate @code{custom-variable-p} instead of
1289 @code{commandp}.
1290 @end defun
1291
1292 @deffn Command read-color &optional prompt convert allow-empty display
1293 This function reads a string that is a color specification, either the
1294 color's name or an RGB hex value such as @code{#RRRGGGBBB}. It
1295 prompts with @var{prompt} (default: @code{"Color (name or #RGB triplet):"})
1296 and provides completion for color names, but not for hex RGB values.
1297 In addition to names of standard colors, completion candidates include
1298 the foreground and background colors at point.
1299
1300 Valid RGB values are described in @ref{Color Names}.
1301
1302 The function's return value is the string typed by the user in the
1303 minibuffer. However, when called interactively or if the optional
1304 argument @var{convert} is non-@code{nil}, it converts any input color
1305 name into the corresponding RGB value string and instead returns that.
1306 This function requires a valid color specification to be input.
1307 Empty color names are allowed when @var{allow-empty} is
1308 non-@code{nil} and the user enters null input.
1309
1310 Interactively, or when @var{display} is non-@code{nil}, the return
1311 value is also displayed in the echo area.
1312 @end deffn
1313
1314 See also the functions @code{read-coding-system} and
1315 @code{read-non-nil-coding-system}, in @ref{User-Chosen Coding Systems},
1316 and @code{read-input-method-name}, in @ref{Input Methods}.
1317
1318 @node Reading File Names
1319 @subsection Reading File Names
1320 @cindex read file names
1321 @cindex prompt for file name
1322
1323 The high-level completion functions @code{read-file-name},
1324 @code{read-directory-name}, and @code{read-shell-command} are designed
1325 to read file names, directory names, and shell commands, respectively.
1326 They provide special features, including automatic insertion of the
1327 default directory.
1328
1329 @defun read-file-name prompt &optional directory default require-match initial predicate
1330 This function reads a file name, prompting with @var{prompt} and
1331 providing completion.
1332
1333 As an exception, this function reads a file name using a graphical
1334 file dialog instead of the minibuffer, if all of the following are
1335 true:
1336
1337 @enumerate
1338 @item
1339 It is invoked via a mouse command.
1340
1341 @item
1342 The selected frame is on a graphical display supporting such dialogs.
1343
1344 @item
1345 The variable @code{use-dialog-box} is non-@code{nil}.
1346 @xref{Dialog Boxes,, Dialog Boxes, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}.
1347
1348 @item
1349 The @var{directory} argument, described below, does not specify a
1350 remote file. @xref{Remote Files,, Remote Files, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}.
1351 @end enumerate
1352
1353 @noindent
1354 The exact behavior when using a graphical file dialog is
1355 platform-dependent. Here, we simply document the behavior when using
1356 the minibuffer.
1357
1358 @code{read-file-name} does not automatically expand the returned file
1359 name. You must call @code{expand-file-name} yourself if an absolute
1360 file name is required.
1361
1362 The optional argument @var{require-match} has the same meaning as in
1363 @code{completing-read}. @xref{Minibuffer Completion}.
1364
1365 The argument @var{directory} specifies the directory to use for
1366 completing relative file names. It should be an absolute directory
1367 name. If the variable @code{insert-default-directory} is non-@code{nil},
1368 @var{directory} is also inserted in the minibuffer as initial input.
1369 It defaults to the current buffer's value of @code{default-directory}.
1370
1371 If you specify @var{initial}, that is an initial file name to insert
1372 in the buffer (after @var{directory}, if that is inserted). In this
1373 case, point goes at the beginning of @var{initial}. The default for
1374 @var{initial} is @code{nil}---don't insert any file name. To see what
1375 @var{initial} does, try the command @kbd{C-x C-v} in a buffer visiting
1376 a file. @strong{Please note:} we recommend using @var{default} rather
1377 than @var{initial} in most cases.
1378
1379 If @var{default} is non-@code{nil}, then the function returns
1380 @var{default} if the user exits the minibuffer with the same non-empty
1381 contents that @code{read-file-name} inserted initially. The initial
1382 minibuffer contents are always non-empty if
1383 @code{insert-default-directory} is non-@code{nil}, as it is by
1384 default. @var{default} is not checked for validity, regardless of the
1385 value of @var{require-match}. However, if @var{require-match} is
1386 non-@code{nil}, the initial minibuffer contents should be a valid file
1387 (or directory) name. Otherwise @code{read-file-name} attempts
1388 completion if the user exits without any editing, and does not return
1389 @var{default}. @var{default} is also available through the history
1390 commands.
1391
1392 If @var{default} is @code{nil}, @code{read-file-name} tries to find a
1393 substitute default to use in its place, which it treats in exactly the
1394 same way as if it had been specified explicitly. If @var{default} is
1395 @code{nil}, but @var{initial} is non-@code{nil}, then the default is
1396 the absolute file name obtained from @var{directory} and
1397 @var{initial}. If both @var{default} and @var{initial} are @code{nil}
1398 and the buffer is visiting a file, @code{read-file-name} uses the
1399 absolute file name of that file as default. If the buffer is not
1400 visiting a file, then there is no default. In that case, if the user
1401 types @key{RET} without any editing, @code{read-file-name} simply
1402 returns the pre-inserted contents of the minibuffer.
1403
1404 If the user types @key{RET} in an empty minibuffer, this function
1405 returns an empty string, regardless of the value of
1406 @var{require-match}. This is, for instance, how the user can make the
1407 current buffer visit no file using @kbd{M-x set-visited-file-name}.
1408
1409 If @var{predicate} is non-@code{nil}, it specifies a function of one
1410 argument that decides which file names are acceptable completion
1411 alternatives. A file name is an acceptable value if @var{predicate}
1412 returns non-@code{nil} for it.
1413
1414 Here is an example of using @code{read-file-name}:
1415
1416 @example
1417 @group
1418 (read-file-name "The file is ")
1419
1420 ;; @r{After evaluation of the preceding expression,}
1421 ;; @r{the following appears in the minibuffer:}
1422 @end group
1423
1424 @group
1425 ---------- Buffer: Minibuffer ----------
1426 The file is /gp/gnu/elisp/@point{}
1427 ---------- Buffer: Minibuffer ----------
1428 @end group
1429 @end example
1430
1431 @noindent
1432 Typing @kbd{manual @key{TAB}} results in the following:
1433
1434 @example
1435 @group
1436 ---------- Buffer: Minibuffer ----------
1437 The file is /gp/gnu/elisp/manual.texi@point{}
1438 ---------- Buffer: Minibuffer ----------
1439 @end group
1440 @end example
1441
1442 @c Wordy to avoid overfull hbox in smallbook mode.
1443 @noindent
1444 If the user types @key{RET}, @code{read-file-name} returns the file name
1445 as the string @code{"/gp/gnu/elisp/manual.texi"}.
1446 @end defun
1447
1448 @defvar read-file-name-function
1449 If non-@code{nil}, this should be a function that accepts the same
1450 arguments as @code{read-file-name}. When @code{read-file-name} is
1451 called, it calls this function with the supplied arguments instead of
1452 doing its usual work.
1453 @end defvar
1454
1455 @defopt read-file-name-completion-ignore-case
1456 If this variable is non-@code{nil}, @code{read-file-name} ignores case
1457 when performing completion.
1458 @end defopt
1459
1460 @defun read-directory-name prompt &optional directory default require-match initial
1461 This function is like @code{read-file-name} but allows only directory
1462 names as completion alternatives.
1463
1464 If @var{default} is @code{nil} and @var{initial} is non-@code{nil},
1465 @code{read-directory-name} constructs a substitute default by
1466 combining @var{directory} (or the current buffer's default directory
1467 if @var{directory} is @code{nil}) and @var{initial}. If both
1468 @var{default} and @var{initial} are @code{nil}, this function uses
1469 @var{directory} as substitute default, or the current buffer's default
1470 directory if @var{directory} is @code{nil}.
1471 @end defun
1472
1473 @defopt insert-default-directory
1474 This variable is used by @code{read-file-name}, and thus, indirectly,
1475 by most commands reading file names. (This includes all commands that
1476 use the code letters @samp{f} or @samp{F} in their interactive form.
1477 @xref{Interactive Codes,, Code Characters for interactive}.) Its
1478 value controls whether @code{read-file-name} starts by placing the
1479 name of the default directory in the minibuffer, plus the initial file
1480 name, if any. If the value of this variable is @code{nil}, then
1481 @code{read-file-name} does not place any initial input in the
1482 minibuffer (unless you specify initial input with the @var{initial}
1483 argument). In that case, the default directory is still used for
1484 completion of relative file names, but is not displayed.
1485
1486 If this variable is @code{nil} and the initial minibuffer contents are
1487 empty, the user may have to explicitly fetch the next history element
1488 to access a default value. If the variable is non-@code{nil}, the
1489 initial minibuffer contents are always non-empty and the user can
1490 always request a default value by immediately typing @key{RET} in an
1491 unedited minibuffer. (See above.)
1492
1493 For example:
1494
1495 @example
1496 @group
1497 ;; @r{Here the minibuffer starts out with the default directory.}
1498 (let ((insert-default-directory t))
1499 (read-file-name "The file is "))
1500 @end group
1501
1502 @group
1503 ---------- Buffer: Minibuffer ----------
1504 The file is ~lewis/manual/@point{}
1505 ---------- Buffer: Minibuffer ----------
1506 @end group
1507
1508 @group
1509 ;; @r{Here the minibuffer is empty and only the prompt}
1510 ;; @r{appears on its line.}
1511 (let ((insert-default-directory nil))
1512 (read-file-name "The file is "))
1513 @end group
1514
1515 @group
1516 ---------- Buffer: Minibuffer ----------
1517 The file is @point{}
1518 ---------- Buffer: Minibuffer ----------
1519 @end group
1520 @end example
1521 @end defopt
1522
1523 @defun read-shell-command prompt &optional initial history &rest args
1524 This function reads a shell command from the minibuffer, prompting
1525 with @var{prompt} and providing intelligent completion. It completes
1526 the first word of the command using candidates that are appropriate
1527 for command names, and the rest of the command words as file names.
1528
1529 This function uses @code{minibuffer-local-shell-command-map} as the
1530 keymap for minibuffer input. The @var{history} argument specifies the
1531 history list to use; if is omitted or @code{nil}, it defaults to
1532 @code{shell-command-history} (@pxref{Minibuffer History,
1533 shell-command-history}). The optional argument @var{initial}
1534 specifies the initial content of the minibuffer (@pxref{Initial
1535 Input}). The rest of @var{args}, if present, are used as the
1536 @var{default} and @var{inherit-input-method} arguments in
1537 @code{read-from-minibuffer} (@pxref{Text from Minibuffer}).
1538 @end defun
1539
1540 @defvar minibuffer-local-shell-command-map
1541 This keymap is used by @code{read-shell-command} for completing
1542 command and file names that are part of a shell command. It uses
1543 @code{minibuffer-local-map} as its parent keymap, and binds @key{TAB}
1544 to @code{completion-at-point}.
1545 @end defvar
1546
1547 @node Completion Variables
1548 @subsection Completion Variables
1549
1550 Here are some variables that can be used to alter the default
1551 completion behavior.
1552
1553 @cindex completion styles
1554 @defopt completion-styles
1555 The value of this variable is a list of completion style (symbols) to
1556 use for performing completion. A @dfn{completion style} is a set of
1557 rules for generating completions. Each symbol occurring this list
1558 must have a corresponding entry in @code{completion-styles-alist}.
1559 @end defopt
1560
1561 @defvar completion-styles-alist
1562 This variable stores a list of available completion styles. Each
1563 element in the list has the form
1564
1565 @example
1566 (@var{style} @var{try-completion} @var{all-completions} @var{doc})
1567 @end example
1568
1569 @noindent
1570 Here, @var{style} is the name of the completion style (a symbol),
1571 which may be used in the @code{completion-styles} variable to refer to
1572 this style; @var{try-completion} is the function that does the
1573 completion; @var{all-completions} is the function that lists the
1574 completions; and @var{doc} is a string describing the completion
1575 style.
1576
1577 The @var{try-completion} and @var{all-completions} functions should
1578 each accept four arguments: @var{string}, @var{collection},
1579 @var{predicate}, and @var{point}. The @var{string}, @var{collection},
1580 and @var{predicate} arguments have the same meanings as in
1581 @code{try-completion} (@pxref{Basic Completion}), and the @var{point}
1582 argument is the position of point within @var{string}. Each function
1583 should return a non-@code{nil} value if it performed its job, and
1584 @code{nil} if it did not (e.g.@: if there is no way to complete
1585 @var{string} according to the completion style).
1586
1587 When the user calls a completion command like
1588 @code{minibuffer-complete} (@pxref{Completion Commands}), Emacs looks
1589 for the first style listed in @code{completion-styles} and calls its
1590 @var{try-completion} function. If this function returns @code{nil},
1591 Emacs moves to the next listed completion style and calls its
1592 @var{try-completion} function, and so on until one of the
1593 @var{try-completion} functions successfully performs completion and
1594 returns a non-@code{nil} value. A similar procedure is used for
1595 listing completions, via the @var{all-completions} functions.
1596
1597 @xref{Completion Styles,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}, for a
1598 description of the available completion styles.
1599 @end defvar
1600
1601 @defopt completion-category-overrides
1602 This variable specifies special completion styles and other completion
1603 behaviors to use when completing certain types of text. Its value
1604 should be an alist with elements of the form @code{(@var{category}
1605 . @var{alist})}. @var{category} is a symbol describing what is being
1606 completed; currently, the @code{buffer}, @code{file}, and
1607 @code{unicode-name} categories are defined, but others can be defined
1608 via specialized completion functions (@pxref{Programmed Completion}).
1609 @var{alist} is an association list describing how completion should
1610 behave for the corresponding category. The following alist keys are
1611 supported:
1612
1613 @table @code
1614 @item styles
1615 The value should be a list of completion styles (symbols).
1616
1617 @item cycle
1618 The value should be a value for @code{completion-cycle-threshold}
1619 (@pxref{Completion Options,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}) for this
1620 category.
1621 @end table
1622
1623 @noindent
1624 Additional alist entries may be defined in the future.
1625 @end defopt
1626
1627 @defvar completion-extra-properties
1628 This variable is used to specify extra properties of the current
1629 completion command. It is intended to be let-bound by specialized
1630 completion commands. Its value should be a list of property and value
1631 pairs. The following properties are supported:
1632
1633 @table @code
1634 @item :annotation-function
1635 The value should be a function to add annotations in the completions
1636 buffer. This function must accept one argument, a completion, and
1637 should either return @code{nil} or a string to be displayed next to
1638 the completion.
1639
1640 @item :exit-function
1641 The value should be a function to run after performing completion.
1642 The function should accept two arguments, @var{string} and
1643 @var{status}, where @var{string} is the text to which the field was
1644 completed, and @var{status} indicates what kind of operation happened:
1645 @code{finished} if text is now complete, @code{sole} if the text
1646 cannot be further completed but completion is not finished, or
1647 @code{exact} if the text is a valid completion but may be further
1648 completed.
1649 @end table
1650 @end defvar
1651
1652 @node Programmed Completion
1653 @subsection Programmed Completion
1654 @cindex programmed completion
1655
1656 Sometimes it is not possible or convenient to create an alist or
1657 an obarray containing all the intended possible completions ahead
1658 of time. In such a case, you can supply your own function to compute
1659 the completion of a given string. This is called @dfn{programmed
1660 completion}. Emacs uses programmed completion when completing file
1661 names (@pxref{File Name Completion}), among many other cases.
1662
1663 To use this feature, pass a function as the @var{collection}
1664 argument to @code{completing-read}. The function
1665 @code{completing-read} arranges to pass your completion function along
1666 to @code{try-completion}, @code{all-completions}, and other basic
1667 completion functions, which will then let your function do all
1668 the work.
1669
1670 The completion function should accept three arguments:
1671
1672 @itemize @bullet
1673 @item
1674 The string to be completed.
1675
1676 @item
1677 A predicate function with which to filter possible matches, or
1678 @code{nil} if none. The function should call the predicate for each
1679 possible match, and ignore the match if the predicate returns
1680 @code{nil}.
1681
1682 @item
1683 A flag specifying the type of completion operation to perform. This
1684 is one of the following four values:
1685
1686 @table @code
1687 @item nil
1688 This specifies a @code{try-completion} operation. The function should
1689 return @code{t} if the specified string is a unique and exact match;
1690 if there is more than one match, it should return the common substring
1691 of all matches (if the string is an exact match for one completion
1692 alternative but also matches other longer alternatives, the return
1693 value is the string); if there are no matches, it should return
1694 @code{nil}.
1695
1696 @item t
1697 This specifies an @code{all-completions} operation. The function
1698 should return a list of all possible completions of the specified
1699 string.
1700
1701 @item lambda
1702 This specifies a @code{test-completion} operation. The function
1703 should return @code{t} if the specified string is an exact match for
1704 some completion alternative; @code{nil} otherwise.
1705
1706 @item (boundaries . @var{suffix})
1707 This specifies a @code{completion-boundaries} operation. The function
1708 should return @code{(boundaries @var{start} . @var{end})}, where
1709 @var{start} is the position of the beginning boundary in the specified
1710 string, and @var{end} is the position of the end boundary in
1711 @var{suffix}.
1712
1713 @item metadata
1714 This specifies a request for information about the state of the
1715 current completion. The function should return an alist, as described
1716 below. The alist may contain any number of elements.
1717 @end table
1718
1719 @noindent
1720 If the flag has any other value, the completion function should return
1721 @code{nil}.
1722 @end itemize
1723
1724 The following is a list of metadata entries that a completion function
1725 may return in response to a @code{metadata} flag argument:
1726
1727 @table @code
1728 @item category
1729 The value should be a symbol describing what kind of text the
1730 completion function is trying to complete. If the symbol matches one
1731 of the keys in @code{completion-category-overrides}, the usual
1732 completion behavior is overridden. @xref{Completion Variables}.
1733
1734 @item annotation-function
1735 The value should be a function for @dfn{annotating} completions. The
1736 function should take one argument, @var{string}, which is a possible
1737 completion. It should return a string, which is displayed after the
1738 completion @var{string} in the @file{*Completions*} buffer.
1739
1740 @item display-sort-function
1741 The value should be a function for sorting completions. The function
1742 should take one argument, a list of completion strings, and return a
1743 sorted list of completion strings. It is allowed to alter the input
1744 list destructively.
1745
1746 @item cycle-sort-function
1747 The value should be a function for sorting completions, when
1748 @code{completion-cycle-threshold} is non-@code{nil} and the user is
1749 cycling through completion alternatives. @xref{Completion Options,,,
1750 emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}. Its argument list and return value are
1751 the same as for @code{display-sort-function}.
1752 @end table
1753
1754 @defun completion-table-dynamic function
1755 This function is a convenient way to write a function that can act as
1756 a programmed completion function. The argument @var{function} should be
1757 a function that takes one argument, a string, and returns an alist of
1758 possible completions of it. You can think of
1759 @code{completion-table-dynamic} as a transducer between that interface
1760 and the interface for programmed completion functions.
1761 @end defun
1762
1763 @node Completion in Buffers
1764 @subsection Completion in Ordinary Buffers
1765 @cindex inline completion
1766
1767 @findex completion-at-point
1768 Although completion is usually done in the minibuffer, the
1769 completion facility can also be used on the text in ordinary Emacs
1770 buffers. In many major modes, in-buffer completion is performed by
1771 the @kbd{C-M-i} or @kbd{M-@key{TAB}} command, bound to
1772 @code{completion-at-point}. @xref{Symbol Completion,,, emacs, The GNU
1773 Emacs Manual}. This command uses the abnormal hook variable
1774 @code{completion-at-point-functions}:
1775
1776 @defvar completion-at-point-functions
1777 The value of this abnormal hook should be a list of functions, which
1778 are used to compute a completion table for completing the text at
1779 point. It can be used by major modes to provide mode-specific
1780 completion tables (@pxref{Major Mode Conventions}).
1781
1782 When the command @code{completion-at-point} runs, it calls the
1783 functions in the list one by one, without any argument. Each function
1784 should return @code{nil} if it is unable to produce a completion table
1785 for the text at point. Otherwise it should return a list of the form
1786
1787 @example
1788 (@var{start} @var{end} @var{collection} . @var{props})
1789 @end example
1790
1791 @noindent
1792 @var{start} and @var{end} delimit the text to complete (which should
1793 enclose point). @var{collection} is a completion table for completing
1794 that text, in a form suitable for passing as the second argument to
1795 @code{try-completion} (@pxref{Basic Completion}); completion
1796 alternatives will be generated from this completion table in the usual
1797 way, via the completion styles defined in @code{completion-styles}
1798 (@pxref{Completion Variables}). @var{props} is a property list for
1799 additional information; any of the properties in
1800 @code{completion-extra-properties} are recognized (@pxref{Completion
1801 Variables}), as well as the following additional ones:
1802
1803 @table @code
1804 @item :predicate
1805 The value should be a predicate that completion candidates need to
1806 satisfy.
1807
1808 @item :exclusive
1809 If the value is @code{no}, then if the completion table fails to match
1810 the text at point, @code{completion-at-point} moves on to the
1811 next function in @code{completion-at-point-functions} instead of
1812 reporting a completion failure.
1813 @end table
1814
1815 A function in @code{completion-at-point-functions} may also return a
1816 function. In that case, that returned function is called, with no
1817 argument, and it is entirely responsible for performing the
1818 completion. We discourage this usage; it is intended to help convert
1819 old code to using @code{completion-at-point}.
1820
1821 The first function in @code{completion-at-point-functions} to return a
1822 non-@code{nil} value is used by @code{completion-at-point}. The
1823 remaining functions are not called. The exception to this is when
1824 there is an @code{:exclusive} specification, as described above.
1825 @end defvar
1826
1827 The following function provides a convenient way to perform
1828 completion on an arbitrary stretch of text in an Emacs buffer:
1829
1830 @defun completion-in-region start end collection &optional predicate
1831 This function completes the text in the current buffer between the
1832 positions @var{start} and @var{end}, using @var{collection}. The
1833 argument @var{collection} has the same meaning as in
1834 @code{try-completion} (@pxref{Basic Completion}).
1835
1836 This function inserts the completion text directly into the current
1837 buffer. Unlike @code{completing-read} (@pxref{Minibuffer
1838 Completion}), it does not activate the minibuffer.
1839
1840 For this function to work, point must be somewhere between @var{start}
1841 and @var{end}.
1842 @end defun
1843
1844
1845 @node Yes-or-No Queries
1846 @section Yes-or-No Queries
1847 @cindex asking the user questions
1848 @cindex querying the user
1849 @cindex yes-or-no questions
1850
1851 This section describes functions used to ask the user a yes-or-no
1852 question. The function @code{y-or-n-p} can be answered with a single
1853 character; it is useful for questions where an inadvertent wrong answer
1854 will not have serious consequences. @code{yes-or-no-p} is suitable for
1855 more momentous questions, since it requires three or four characters to
1856 answer.
1857
1858 If either of these functions is called in a command that was invoked
1859 using the mouse---more precisely, if @code{last-nonmenu-event}
1860 (@pxref{Command Loop Info}) is either @code{nil} or a list---then it
1861 uses a dialog box or pop-up menu to ask the question. Otherwise, it
1862 uses keyboard input. You can force use either of the mouse or of keyboard
1863 input by binding @code{last-nonmenu-event} to a suitable value around
1864 the call.
1865
1866 Strictly speaking, @code{yes-or-no-p} uses the minibuffer and
1867 @code{y-or-n-p} does not; but it seems best to describe them together.
1868
1869 @defun y-or-n-p prompt
1870 This function asks the user a question, expecting input in the echo
1871 area. It returns @code{t} if the user types @kbd{y}, @code{nil} if the
1872 user types @kbd{n}. This function also accepts @key{SPC} to mean yes
1873 and @key{DEL} to mean no. It accepts @kbd{C-]} to mean ``quit'', like
1874 @kbd{C-g}, because the question might look like a minibuffer and for
1875 that reason the user might try to use @kbd{C-]} to get out. The answer
1876 is a single character, with no @key{RET} needed to terminate it. Upper
1877 and lower case are equivalent.
1878
1879 ``Asking the question'' means printing @var{prompt} in the echo area,
1880 followed by the string @w{@samp{(y or n) }}. If the input is not one of
1881 the expected answers (@kbd{y}, @kbd{n}, @kbd{@key{SPC}},
1882 @kbd{@key{DEL}}, or something that quits), the function responds
1883 @samp{Please answer y or n.}, and repeats the request.
1884
1885 This function does not actually use the minibuffer, since it does not
1886 allow editing of the answer. It actually uses the echo area (@pxref{The
1887 Echo Area}), which uses the same screen space as the minibuffer. The
1888 cursor moves to the echo area while the question is being asked.
1889
1890 The answers and their meanings, even @samp{y} and @samp{n}, are not
1891 hardwired. The keymap @code{query-replace-map} specifies them.
1892 @xref{Search and Replace}.
1893
1894 In the following example, the user first types @kbd{q}, which is
1895 invalid. At the next prompt the user types @kbd{y}.
1896
1897 @c Need an interactive example, because otherwise the return value
1898 @c obscures the display of the valid answer.
1899 @smallexample
1900 @group
1901 (defun ask ()
1902 (interactive)
1903 (y-or-n-p "Do you need a lift? "))
1904
1905 ;; @r{After evaluation of the preceding definition, @kbd{M-x ask}}
1906 ;; @r{causes the following prompt to appear in the echo area:}
1907 @end group
1908
1909 @group
1910 ---------- Echo area ----------
1911 Do you need a lift? (y or n)
1912 ---------- Echo area ----------
1913 @end group
1914
1915 ;; @r{If the user then types @kbd{q}, the following appears:}
1916
1917 @group
1918 ---------- Echo area ----------
1919 Please answer y or n. Do you need a lift? (y or n)
1920 ---------- Echo area ----------
1921 @end group
1922
1923 ;; @r{When the user types a valid answer,}
1924 ;; @r{it is displayed after the question:}
1925
1926 @group
1927 ---------- Echo area ----------
1928 Do you need a lift? (y or n) y
1929 ---------- Echo area ----------
1930 @end group
1931 @end smallexample
1932
1933 @noindent
1934 We show successive lines of echo area messages, but only one actually
1935 appears on the screen at a time.
1936 @end defun
1937
1938 @defun y-or-n-p-with-timeout prompt seconds default
1939 Like @code{y-or-n-p}, except that if the user fails to answer within
1940 @var{seconds} seconds, this function stops waiting and returns
1941 @var{default}. It works by setting up a timer; see @ref{Timers}.
1942 The argument @var{seconds} may be an integer or a floating point number.
1943 @end defun
1944
1945 @defun yes-or-no-p prompt
1946 This function asks the user a question, expecting input in the
1947 minibuffer. It returns @code{t} if the user enters @samp{yes},
1948 @code{nil} if the user types @samp{no}. The user must type @key{RET} to
1949 finalize the response. Upper and lower case are equivalent.
1950
1951 @code{yes-or-no-p} starts by displaying @var{prompt} in the echo area,
1952 followed by @w{@samp{(yes or no) }}. The user must type one of the
1953 expected responses; otherwise, the function responds @samp{Please answer
1954 yes or no.}, waits about two seconds and repeats the request.
1955
1956 @code{yes-or-no-p} requires more work from the user than
1957 @code{y-or-n-p} and is appropriate for more crucial decisions.
1958
1959 Here is an example:
1960
1961 @smallexample
1962 @group
1963 (yes-or-no-p "Do you really want to remove everything? ")
1964
1965 ;; @r{After evaluation of the preceding expression,}
1966 ;; @r{the following prompt appears,}
1967 ;; @r{with an empty minibuffer:}
1968 @end group
1969
1970 @group
1971 ---------- Buffer: minibuffer ----------
1972 Do you really want to remove everything? (yes or no)
1973 ---------- Buffer: minibuffer ----------
1974 @end group
1975 @end smallexample
1976
1977 @noindent
1978 If the user first types @kbd{y @key{RET}}, which is invalid because this
1979 function demands the entire word @samp{yes}, it responds by displaying
1980 these prompts, with a brief pause between them:
1981
1982 @smallexample
1983 @group
1984 ---------- Buffer: minibuffer ----------
1985 Please answer yes or no.
1986 Do you really want to remove everything? (yes or no)
1987 ---------- Buffer: minibuffer ----------
1988 @end group
1989 @end smallexample
1990 @end defun
1991
1992 @node Multiple Queries
1993 @section Asking Multiple Y-or-N Questions
1994
1995 When you have a series of similar questions to ask, such as ``Do you
1996 want to save this buffer'' for each buffer in turn, you should use
1997 @code{map-y-or-n-p} to ask the collection of questions, rather than
1998 asking each question individually. This gives the user certain
1999 convenient facilities such as the ability to answer the whole series at
2000 once.
2001
2002 @defun map-y-or-n-p prompter actor list &optional help action-alist no-cursor-in-echo-area
2003 This function asks the user a series of questions, reading a
2004 single-character answer in the echo area for each one.
2005
2006 The value of @var{list} specifies the objects to ask questions about.
2007 It should be either a list of objects or a generator function. If it is
2008 a function, it should expect no arguments, and should return either the
2009 next object to ask about, or @code{nil}, meaning to stop asking questions.
2010
2011 The argument @var{prompter} specifies how to ask each question. If
2012 @var{prompter} is a string, the question text is computed like this:
2013
2014 @example
2015 (format @var{prompter} @var{object})
2016 @end example
2017
2018 @noindent
2019 where @var{object} is the next object to ask about (as obtained from
2020 @var{list}).
2021
2022 If not a string, @var{prompter} should be a function of one argument
2023 (the next object to ask about) and should return the question text. If
2024 the value is a string, that is the question to ask the user. The
2025 function can also return @code{t}, meaning do act on this object (and
2026 don't ask the user), or @code{nil}, meaning ignore this object (and don't
2027 ask the user).
2028
2029 The argument @var{actor} says how to act on the answers that the user
2030 gives. It should be a function of one argument, and it is called with
2031 each object that the user says yes for. Its argument is always an
2032 object obtained from @var{list}.
2033
2034 If the argument @var{help} is given, it should be a list of this form:
2035
2036 @example
2037 (@var{singular} @var{plural} @var{action})
2038 @end example
2039
2040 @noindent
2041 where @var{singular} is a string containing a singular noun that
2042 describes the objects conceptually being acted on, @var{plural} is the
2043 corresponding plural noun, and @var{action} is a transitive verb
2044 describing what @var{actor} does.
2045
2046 If you don't specify @var{help}, the default is @code{("object"
2047 "objects" "act on")}.
2048
2049 Each time a question is asked, the user may enter @kbd{y}, @kbd{Y}, or
2050 @key{SPC} to act on that object; @kbd{n}, @kbd{N}, or @key{DEL} to skip
2051 that object; @kbd{!} to act on all following objects; @key{ESC} or
2052 @kbd{q} to exit (skip all following objects); @kbd{.} (period) to act on
2053 the current object and then exit; or @kbd{C-h} to get help. These are
2054 the same answers that @code{query-replace} accepts. The keymap
2055 @code{query-replace-map} defines their meaning for @code{map-y-or-n-p}
2056 as well as for @code{query-replace}; see @ref{Search and Replace}.
2057
2058 You can use @var{action-alist} to specify additional possible answers
2059 and what they mean. It is an alist of elements of the form
2060 @code{(@var{char} @var{function} @var{help})}, each of which defines one
2061 additional answer. In this element, @var{char} is a character (the
2062 answer); @var{function} is a function of one argument (an object from
2063 @var{list}); @var{help} is a string.
2064
2065 When the user responds with @var{char}, @code{map-y-or-n-p} calls
2066 @var{function}. If it returns non-@code{nil}, the object is considered
2067 ``acted upon'', and @code{map-y-or-n-p} advances to the next object in
2068 @var{list}. If it returns @code{nil}, the prompt is repeated for the
2069 same object.
2070
2071 Normally, @code{map-y-or-n-p} binds @code{cursor-in-echo-area} while
2072 prompting. But if @var{no-cursor-in-echo-area} is non-@code{nil}, it
2073 does not do that.
2074
2075 If @code{map-y-or-n-p} is called in a command that was invoked using the
2076 mouse---more precisely, if @code{last-nonmenu-event} (@pxref{Command
2077 Loop Info}) is either @code{nil} or a list---then it uses a dialog box
2078 or pop-up menu to ask the question. In this case, it does not use
2079 keyboard input or the echo area. You can force use either of the mouse or
2080 of keyboard input by binding @code{last-nonmenu-event} to a suitable
2081 value around the call.
2082
2083 The return value of @code{map-y-or-n-p} is the number of objects acted on.
2084 @end defun
2085 @c FIXME An example of this would be more useful than all the
2086 @c preceding examples of simple things.
2087
2088 @node Reading a Password
2089 @section Reading a Password
2090 @cindex passwords, reading
2091
2092 To read a password to pass to another program, you can use the
2093 function @code{read-passwd}.
2094
2095 @defun read-passwd prompt &optional confirm default
2096 This function reads a password, prompting with @var{prompt}. It does
2097 not echo the password as the user types it; instead, it echoes @samp{.}
2098 for each character in the password.
2099
2100 The optional argument @var{confirm}, if non-@code{nil}, says to read the
2101 password twice and insist it must be the same both times. If it isn't
2102 the same, the user has to type it over and over until the last two
2103 times match.
2104
2105 The optional argument @var{default} specifies the default password to
2106 return if the user enters empty input. If @var{default} is @code{nil},
2107 then @code{read-passwd} returns the null string in that case.
2108 @end defun
2109
2110 @node Minibuffer Commands
2111 @section Minibuffer Commands
2112
2113 This section describes some commands meant for use in the
2114 minibuffer.
2115
2116 @deffn Command exit-minibuffer
2117 This command exits the active minibuffer. It is normally bound to
2118 keys in minibuffer local keymaps.
2119 @end deffn
2120
2121 @deffn Command self-insert-and-exit
2122 This command exits the active minibuffer after inserting the last
2123 character typed on the keyboard (found in @code{last-command-event};
2124 @pxref{Command Loop Info}).
2125 @end deffn
2126
2127 @deffn Command previous-history-element n
2128 This command replaces the minibuffer contents with the value of the
2129 @var{n}th previous (older) history element.
2130 @end deffn
2131
2132 @deffn Command next-history-element n
2133 This command replaces the minibuffer contents with the value of the
2134 @var{n}th more recent history element.
2135 @end deffn
2136
2137 @deffn Command previous-matching-history-element pattern n
2138 This command replaces the minibuffer contents with the value of the
2139 @var{n}th previous (older) history element that matches @var{pattern} (a
2140 regular expression).
2141 @end deffn
2142
2143 @deffn Command next-matching-history-element pattern n
2144 This command replaces the minibuffer contents with the value of the
2145 @var{n}th next (newer) history element that matches @var{pattern} (a
2146 regular expression).
2147 @end deffn
2148
2149 @deffn Command previous-complete-history-element n
2150 This command replaces the minibuffer contents with the value of the
2151 @var{n}th previous (older) history element that completes the current
2152 contents of the minibuffer before the point.
2153 @end deffn
2154
2155 @deffn Command next-complete-history-element n
2156 This command replaces the minibuffer contents with the value of the
2157 @var{n}th next (newer) history element that completes the current
2158 contents of the minibuffer before the point.
2159 @end deffn
2160
2161
2162 @node Minibuffer Windows
2163 @section Minibuffer Windows
2164 @cindex minibuffer windows
2165
2166 These functions access and select minibuffer windows
2167 and test whether they are active.
2168
2169 @defun active-minibuffer-window
2170 This function returns the currently active minibuffer window, or
2171 @code{nil} if there is none.
2172 @end defun
2173
2174 @defun minibuffer-window &optional frame
2175 @anchor{Definition of minibuffer-window}
2176 This function returns the minibuffer window used for frame @var{frame}.
2177 If @var{frame} is @code{nil}, that stands for the current frame. Note
2178 that the minibuffer window used by a frame need not be part of that
2179 frame---a frame that has no minibuffer of its own necessarily uses some
2180 other frame's minibuffer window.
2181 @end defun
2182
2183 @defun set-minibuffer-window window
2184 This function specifies @var{window} as the minibuffer window to use.
2185 This affects where the minibuffer is displayed if you put text in it
2186 without invoking the usual minibuffer commands. It has no effect on
2187 the usual minibuffer input functions because they all start by
2188 choosing the minibuffer window according to the current frame.
2189 @end defun
2190
2191 @c Emacs 19 feature
2192 @defun window-minibuffer-p &optional window
2193 This function returns non-@code{nil} if @var{window} is a minibuffer
2194 window.
2195 @var{window} defaults to the selected window.
2196 @end defun
2197
2198 It is not correct to determine whether a given window is a minibuffer by
2199 comparing it with the result of @code{(minibuffer-window)}, because
2200 there can be more than one minibuffer window if there is more than one
2201 frame.
2202
2203 @defun minibuffer-window-active-p window
2204 This function returns non-@code{nil} if @var{window} is the currently
2205 active minibuffer window.
2206 @end defun
2207
2208 @node Minibuffer Contents
2209 @section Minibuffer Contents
2210
2211 These functions access the minibuffer prompt and contents.
2212
2213 @defun minibuffer-prompt
2214 This function returns the prompt string of the currently active
2215 minibuffer. If no minibuffer is active, it returns @code{nil}.
2216 @end defun
2217
2218 @defun minibuffer-prompt-end
2219 This function returns the current
2220 position of the end of the minibuffer prompt, if a minibuffer is
2221 current. Otherwise, it returns the minimum valid buffer position.
2222 @end defun
2223
2224 @defun minibuffer-prompt-width
2225 This function returns the current display-width of the minibuffer
2226 prompt, if a minibuffer is current. Otherwise, it returns zero.
2227 @end defun
2228
2229 @defun minibuffer-contents
2230 This function returns the editable
2231 contents of the minibuffer (that is, everything except the prompt) as
2232 a string, if a minibuffer is current. Otherwise, it returns the
2233 entire contents of the current buffer.
2234 @end defun
2235
2236 @defun minibuffer-contents-no-properties
2237 This is like @code{minibuffer-contents}, except that it does not copy text
2238 properties, just the characters themselves. @xref{Text Properties}.
2239 @end defun
2240
2241 @defun minibuffer-completion-contents
2242 This is like @code{minibuffer-contents}, except that it returns only
2243 the contents before point. That is the part that completion commands
2244 operate on. @xref{Minibuffer Completion}.
2245 @end defun
2246
2247 @defun delete-minibuffer-contents
2248 This function erases the editable contents of the minibuffer (that is,
2249 everything except the prompt), if a minibuffer is current. Otherwise,
2250 it erases the entire current buffer.
2251 @end defun
2252
2253 @node Recursive Mini
2254 @section Recursive Minibuffers
2255 @cindex recursive minibuffers
2256
2257 These functions and variables deal with recursive minibuffers
2258 (@pxref{Recursive Editing}):
2259
2260 @defun minibuffer-depth
2261 This function returns the current depth of activations of the
2262 minibuffer, a nonnegative integer. If no minibuffers are active, it
2263 returns zero.
2264 @end defun
2265
2266 @defopt enable-recursive-minibuffers
2267 If this variable is non-@code{nil}, you can invoke commands (such as
2268 @code{find-file}) that use minibuffers even while the minibuffer window
2269 is active. Such invocation produces a recursive editing level for a new
2270 minibuffer. The outer-level minibuffer is invisible while you are
2271 editing the inner one.
2272
2273 If this variable is @code{nil}, you cannot invoke minibuffer
2274 commands when the minibuffer window is active, not even if you switch to
2275 another window to do it.
2276 @end defopt
2277
2278 @c Emacs 19 feature
2279 If a command name has a property @code{enable-recursive-minibuffers}
2280 that is non-@code{nil}, then the command can use the minibuffer to read
2281 arguments even if it is invoked from the minibuffer. A command can
2282 also achieve this by binding @code{enable-recursive-minibuffers}
2283 to @code{t} in the interactive declaration (@pxref{Using Interactive}).
2284 The minibuffer command @code{next-matching-history-element} (normally
2285 @kbd{M-s} in the minibuffer) does the latter.
2286
2287 @node Minibuffer Misc
2288 @section Minibuffer Miscellany
2289
2290 @defun minibufferp &optional buffer-or-name
2291 This function returns non-@code{nil} if @var{buffer-or-name} is a
2292 minibuffer. If @var{buffer-or-name} is omitted, it tests the current
2293 buffer.
2294 @end defun
2295
2296 @defvar minibuffer-setup-hook
2297 This is a normal hook that is run whenever the minibuffer is entered.
2298 @xref{Hooks}.
2299 @end defvar
2300
2301 @defvar minibuffer-exit-hook
2302 This is a normal hook that is run whenever the minibuffer is exited.
2303 @xref{Hooks}.
2304 @end defvar
2305
2306 @defvar minibuffer-help-form
2307 @anchor{Definition of minibuffer-help-form}
2308 The current value of this variable is used to rebind @code{help-form}
2309 locally inside the minibuffer (@pxref{Help Functions}).
2310 @end defvar
2311
2312 @defvar minibuffer-scroll-window
2313 @anchor{Definition of minibuffer-scroll-window}
2314 If the value of this variable is non-@code{nil}, it should be a window
2315 object. When the function @code{scroll-other-window} is called in the
2316 minibuffer, it scrolls this window.
2317 @end defvar
2318
2319 @defun minibuffer-selected-window
2320 This function returns the window that was selected when the
2321 minibuffer was entered. If selected window is not a minibuffer
2322 window, it returns @code{nil}.
2323 @end defun
2324
2325 @defopt max-mini-window-height
2326 This variable specifies the maximum height for resizing minibuffer
2327 windows. If a float, it specifies a fraction of the height of the
2328 frame. If an integer, it specifies a number of lines.
2329 @end defopt
2330
2331 @vindex minibuffer-message-timeout
2332 @defun minibuffer-message string &rest args
2333 This function displays @var{string} temporarily at the end of the
2334 minibuffer text, for a few seconds, or until the next input event
2335 arrives, whichever comes first. The variable
2336 @code{minibuffer-message-timeout} specifies the number of seconds to
2337 wait in the absence of input. It defaults to 2. If @var{args} is
2338 non-@code{nil}, the actual message is obtained by passing @var{string}
2339 and @var{args} through @code{format}. @xref{Formatting Strings}.
2340 @end defun
2341
2342 @deffn Command minibuffer-inactive-mode
2343 This is the major mode used in inactive minibuffers. It uses
2344 keymap @code{minibuffer-inactive-mode-map}. This can be useful
2345 if the minibuffer is in a separate frame. @xref{Minibuffers and Frames}.
2346 @end deffn