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1 @c This is part of the Emacs manual.
2 @c Copyright (C) 1985-1987, 1993-1995, 1997, 2000-2015 Free Software
3 @c Foundation, Inc.
4 @c See file emacs.texi for copying conditions.
5 @node Search
6 @chapter Searching and Replacement
7 @cindex searching
8 @cindex finding strings within text
9
10 Like other editors, Emacs has commands to search for occurrences of
11 a string. Emacs also has commands to replace occurrences of a string
12 with a different string. There are also commands that do the same
13 thing, but search for patterns instead of fixed strings.
14
15 You can also search multiple files under the control of a tags table
16 (@pxref{Tags Search}) or through the Dired @kbd{A} command
17 (@pxref{Operating on Files}), or ask the @code{grep} program to do it
18 (@pxref{Grep Searching}).
19
20 @menu
21 * Incremental Search:: Search happens as you type the string.
22 * Nonincremental Search:: Specify entire string and then search.
23 * Word Search:: Search for sequence of words.
24 * Symbol Search:: Search for a source code symbol.
25 * Regexp Search:: Search for match for a regexp.
26 * Regexps:: Syntax of regular expressions.
27 * Regexp Backslash:: Regular expression constructs starting with `\'.
28 * Regexp Example:: A complex regular expression explained.
29 * Lax Search:: Search ignores some distinctions among
30 similar characters, like letter-case.
31 * Replace:: Search, and replace some or all matches.
32 * Other Repeating Search:: Operating on all matches for some regexp.
33 * Search Customizations:: Various search customizations.
34 @end menu
35
36 @node Incremental Search
37 @section Incremental Search
38 @cindex incremental search
39 @cindex isearch
40
41 The principal search command in Emacs is @dfn{incremental}: it
42 begins searching as soon as you type the first character of the search
43 string. As you type in the search string, Emacs shows you where the
44 string (as you have typed it so far) would be found. When you have
45 typed enough characters to identify the place you want, you can stop.
46 Depending on what you plan to do next, you may or may not need to
47 terminate the search explicitly with @key{RET}.
48
49 @table @kbd
50 @item C-s
51 Incremental search forward (@code{isearch-forward}).
52 @item C-r
53 Incremental search backward (@code{isearch-backward}).
54 @end table
55
56 @menu
57 * Basic Isearch:: Basic incremental search commands.
58 * Repeat Isearch:: Searching for the same string again.
59 * Isearch Yank:: Commands that grab text into the search string
60 or else edit the search string.
61 * Error in Isearch:: When your string is not found.
62 * Special Isearch:: Special input in incremental search.
63 * Not Exiting Isearch:: Prefix argument and scrolling commands.
64 * Isearch Minibuffer:: Incremental search of the minibuffer history.
65 @end menu
66
67 @node Basic Isearch
68 @subsection Basics of Incremental Search
69
70 @table @kbd
71 @item C-s
72 Begin incremental search (@code{isearch-forward}).
73 @item C-r
74 Begin reverse incremental search (@code{isearch-backward}).
75 @end table
76
77 @kindex C-s
78 @findex isearch-forward
79 @kbd{C-s} (@code{isearch-forward}) starts a forward incremental
80 search. It reads characters from the keyboard, and moves point just
81 past the end of the next occurrence of those characters in the buffer.
82
83 For instance, if you type @kbd{C-s} and then @kbd{F}, that puts the
84 cursor after the first @samp{F} that occurs in the buffer after the
85 starting point. If you then type @kbd{O}, the cursor moves to just
86 after the first @samp{FO}; the @samp{F} in that @samp{FO} might not be
87 the first @samp{F} previously found. After another @kbd{O}, the
88 cursor moves to just after the first @samp{FOO}.
89
90 @cindex faces for highlighting search matches
91 @cindex isearch face
92 At each step, Emacs highlights the @dfn{current match}---the buffer
93 text that matches the search string---using the @code{isearch} face
94 (@pxref{Faces}). @xref{Search Customizations}, for various options
95 that customize this highlighting. The current search string is also
96 displayed in the echo area.
97
98 If you make a mistake typing the search string, type @key{DEL}.
99 Each @key{DEL} cancels the last character of the search string.
100 @xref{Error in Isearch}, for more about dealing with unsuccessful
101 search.
102
103 @cindex exit incremental search
104 @cindex incremental search, exiting
105 When you are satisfied with the place you have reached, type
106 @key{RET}. This stops searching, leaving the cursor where the search
107 brought it. Also, any command not specially meaningful in searches
108 stops the searching and is then executed. Thus, typing @kbd{C-a}
109 exits the search and then moves to the beginning of the line; typing
110 one of the arrow keys exits the search and performs the respective
111 movement command; etc. @key{RET} is necessary only if the next
112 command you want to type is a printing character, @key{DEL},
113 @key{RET}, or another character that is special within searches
114 (@kbd{C-q}, @kbd{C-w}, @kbd{C-r}, @kbd{C-s}, @kbd{C-y}, @kbd{M-y},
115 @kbd{M-r}, @kbd{M-c}, @kbd{M-e}, and some others described below).
116 You can fine-tune the commands that exit the search; see @ref{Not
117 Exiting Isearch}.
118
119 As a special exception, entering @key{RET} when the search string is
120 empty launches nonincremental search (@pxref{Nonincremental Search}).
121 (This can be customized; see @ref{Search Customizations}.)
122
123 To abandon the search and return to the place where you started,
124 type @kbd{@key{ESC} @key{ESC} @key{ESC}} (@code{isearch-cancel}) or
125 @kbd{C-g C-g} (@code{isearch-abort}).
126
127 When you exit the incremental search, it adds the original value of
128 point to the mark ring, without activating the mark; you can thus use
129 @kbd{C-u C-@key{SPC}} or @kbd{C-x C-x} to return to where you were
130 before beginning the search. @xref{Mark Ring}. (Emacs only does this
131 if the mark was not already active; if the mark was active when you
132 started the search, both @kbd{C-u C-@key{SPC}} and @kbd{C-x C-x} will
133 go to the mark.)
134
135 @kindex C-r
136 @findex isearch-backward
137 To search backwards, use @kbd{C-r} (@code{isearch-backward}) instead
138 of @kbd{C-s} to start the search. A backward search finds matches
139 that end before the starting point, just as a forward search finds
140 matches that begin after it.
141
142 @node Repeat Isearch
143 @subsection Repeating Incremental Search
144
145 Suppose you search forward for @samp{FOO} and find a match, but not
146 the one you expected to find: the @samp{FOO} you were aiming for
147 occurs later in the buffer. In this event, type another @kbd{C-s} to
148 move to the next occurrence of the search string. You can repeat this
149 any number of times. If you overshoot, you can cancel some @kbd{C-s}
150 characters with @key{DEL}. Similarly, each @kbd{C-r} in a backward
151 incremental search repeats the backward search.
152
153 @cindex lazy search highlighting
154 If you pause for a little while during incremental search, Emacs
155 highlights all the other possible matches for the search string that
156 are present on the screen. This helps you anticipate where you can
157 get to by typing @kbd{C-s} or @kbd{C-r} to repeat the search. The
158 other matches are highlighted differently from the current match,
159 using the customizable face @code{lazy-highlight} (@pxref{Faces}). If
160 you don't like this feature, you can disable it by setting
161 @code{isearch-lazy-highlight} to @code{nil}. For other customizations
162 related to highlighting matches, see @ref{Search Customizations}.
163
164 After exiting a search, you can search for the same string again by
165 typing just @kbd{C-s C-s}. The first @kbd{C-s} is the key that
166 invokes incremental search, and the second @kbd{C-s} means to search
167 again for the last search string. Similarly, @kbd{C-r C-r} searches
168 backward for the last search string. In determining the last search
169 string, it doesn't matter whether that string was searched for with
170 @kbd{C-s} or @kbd{C-r}.
171
172 If you are searching forward but you realize you were looking for
173 something before the starting point, type @kbd{C-r} to switch to a
174 backward search, leaving the search string unchanged. Similarly,
175 @kbd{C-s} in a backward search switches to a forward search.
176
177 @cindex search, wrapping around
178 @cindex search, overwrapped
179 @cindex wrapped search
180 @cindex overwrapped search
181 If a search is failing and you ask to repeat it by typing another
182 @kbd{C-s}, it starts again from the beginning of the buffer.
183 Repeating a failing reverse search with @kbd{C-r} starts again from
184 the end. This is called @dfn{wrapping around}, and @samp{Wrapped}
185 appears in the search prompt once this has happened. If you keep on
186 going past the original starting point of the search, it changes to
187 @samp{Overwrapped}, which means that you are revisiting matches that
188 you have already seen.
189
190 @cindex search ring
191 @kindex M-n @r{(Incremental search)}
192 @kindex M-p @r{(Incremental search)}
193 @vindex search-ring-max
194 To reuse earlier search strings, use the @dfn{search ring}. The
195 commands @kbd{M-p} and @kbd{M-n} move through the ring to pick a
196 search string to reuse. These commands leave the selected search ring
197 element in the minibuffer, where you can edit it. Type
198 @kbd{C-s}/@kbd{C-r} or @key{RET} to accept the string and start
199 searching for it. The number of most recently used search strings
200 saved in the search ring is specified by the variable
201 @code{search-ring-max}, 16 by default.
202
203 @cindex incremental search, edit search string
204 @cindex interactively edit search string
205 @kindex M-e @r{(Incremental search)}
206 @kindex Mouse-1 @r{in the minibuffer (Incremental Search)}
207 To edit the current search string in the minibuffer without
208 replacing it with items from the search ring, type @kbd{M-e} or click
209 @kbd{Mouse-1} in the minibuffer. Type @key{RET}, @kbd{C-s} or
210 @kbd{C-r} to finish editing the string and search for it. Type
211 @kbd{C-f} or @kbd{@key{RIGHT}} to add to the search string characters
212 following point from the buffer from which you started the search.
213
214 @node Isearch Yank
215 @subsection Isearch Yanking
216
217 In many cases, you will want to use text at or near point as your
218 search string. The commands described in this subsection let you do
219 that conveniently.
220
221 @kindex C-w @r{(Incremental search)}
222 @findex isearch-yank-word-or-char
223 @kbd{C-w} (@code{isearch-yank-word-or-char}) appends the next
224 character or word at point to the search string. This is an easy way
225 to search for another occurrence of the text at point. (The decision
226 of whether to copy a character or a word is heuristic.)
227
228 @kindex M-s C-e @r{(Incremental search)}
229 @findex isearch-yank-line
230 Similarly, @kbd{M-s C-e} (@code{isearch-yank-line}) appends the rest
231 of the current line to the search string. If point is already at the
232 end of a line, it appends the next line. With a prefix argument
233 @var{n}, it appends the next @var{n} lines.
234
235 @kindex C-y @r{(Incremental search)}
236 @kindex M-y @r{(Incremental search)}
237 @kindex Mouse-2 @r{in the minibuffer (Incremental search)}
238 @findex isearch-yank-kill
239 @findex isearch-yank-pop
240 @findex isearch-yank-x-selection
241 Within incremental search, @kbd{C-y} (@code{isearch-yank-kill})
242 appends the current kill to the search string. @kbd{M-y}
243 (@code{isearch-yank-pop}), if called after @kbd{C-y}, replaces that
244 appended text with an earlier kill, similar to the usual @kbd{M-y}
245 (@code{yank-pop}) command (@pxref{Yanking}). Clicking @kbd{Mouse-2}
246 in the echo area appends the current X selection (@pxref{Primary
247 Selection}) to the search string (@code{isearch-yank-x-selection}).
248
249 @kindex C-M-w @r{(Incremental search)}
250 @kindex C-M-y @r{(Incremental search)}
251 @findex isearch-del-char
252 @findex isearch-yank-char
253 @kbd{C-M-w} (@code{isearch-del-char}) deletes the last character
254 from the search string, and @kbd{C-M-y} (@code{isearch-yank-char})
255 appends the character after point to the search string. An
256 alternative method to add the character after point is to enter the
257 minibuffer with @kbd{M-e} (@pxref{Repeat Isearch}) and type @kbd{C-f}
258 or @kbd{@key{RIGHT}} at the end of the search string in the
259 minibuffer. Each @kbd{C-f} or @kbd{@key{RIGHT}} you type adds another
260 character following point to the search string.
261
262 Normally, when the search is case-insensitive, text yanked into the
263 search string is converted to lower case, so that the search remains
264 case-insensitive (@pxref{Lax Search, case folding}). However, if the
265 value of the variable @code{search-upper-case} (@pxref{Lax Search,
266 search-upper-case}) is other than @code{not-yanks}, that disables this
267 down-casing.
268
269 @node Error in Isearch
270 @subsection Errors in Incremental Search
271
272 @cindex isearch-fail face
273 If your string is not found at all, the echo area says @samp{Failing
274 I-Search}, and the cursor moves past the place where Emacs found as
275 much of your string as it could. Thus, if you search for @samp{FOOT},
276 and there is no @samp{FOOT}, you might see the cursor after the
277 @samp{FOO} in @samp{FOOL}. In the echo area, the part of the search
278 string that failed to match is highlighted using the face
279 @code{isearch-fail}.
280
281 At this point, there are several things you can do. If your string
282 was mistyped, you can use @key{DEL} to erase some of it and correct
283 it, or you can type @kbd{M-e} and edit it. If you like the place you
284 have found, you can type @key{RET} to remain there. Or you can type
285 @kbd{C-g}, which removes from the search string the characters that
286 could not be found (the @samp{T} in @samp{FOOT}), leaving those that
287 were found (the @samp{FOO} in @samp{FOOT}). A second @kbd{C-g} at
288 that point cancels the search entirely, returning point to where it
289 was when the search started.
290
291 @cindex quitting (in search)
292 @kindex C-g @r{(Incremental search)}
293 The quit command, @kbd{C-g}, does special things during searches;
294 just what it does depends on the status of the search. If the search
295 has found what you specified and is waiting for input, @kbd{C-g}
296 cancels the entire search, moving the cursor back to where you started
297 the search. If @kbd{C-g} is typed when there are characters in the
298 search string that have not been found---because Emacs is still
299 searching for them, or because it has failed to find them---then the
300 search string characters which have not been found are discarded from
301 the search string. With them gone, the search is now successful and
302 waiting for more input, so a second @kbd{C-g} will cancel the entire
303 search.
304
305 @node Special Isearch
306 @subsection Special Input for Incremental Search
307
308 In addition to characters described in the previous subsections,
309 some of the other characters you type during incremental search have
310 special effects. They are described here.
311
312 To toggle lax space matching (@pxref{Lax Search, lax space
313 matching}), type @kbd{M-s @key{SPC}}.
314
315 To toggle case sensitivity of the search, type @kbd{M-c} or
316 @kbd{M-s c}. @xref{Lax Search, case folding}. If the search string
317 includes upper-case letters, the search is case-sensitive by default.
318
319 To toggle whether or not the search will consider similar and
320 equivalent characters as a match, type @kbd{M-s '}. @xref{Lax Search,
321 character folding}. If the search string includes accented
322 characters, that disables character folding during that search.
323
324 @cindex invisible text, searching for
325 @kindex M-s i @r{(Incremental search)}
326 @findex isearch-toggle-invisible
327 To toggle whether or not invisible text is searched, type
328 @kbd{M-s i} (@code{isearch-toggle-invisible}). @xref{Outline Search}.
329
330 @kindex M-r @r{(Incremental Search)}
331 @kindex M-s r @r{(Incremental Search)}
332 @findex isearch-toggle-regexp
333 To toggle between non-regexp and regexp incremental search, type
334 @kbd{M-r} or @kbd{M-s r} (@code{isearch-toggle-regexp}).
335 @xref{Regexp Search}.
336
337 To toggle symbol mode, type @kbd{M-s _}. @xref{Symbol Search}.
338
339 To search for a newline character, type @kbd{C-j} as part of the
340 search string.
341
342 To search for non-@acronym{ASCII} characters, use one of the
343 following methods:
344
345 @itemize @bullet
346 @item
347 Type @kbd{C-q}, followed by a non-graphic character or a sequence of
348 octal digits. This adds a character to the search string, similar to
349 inserting into a buffer using @kbd{C-q} (@pxref{Inserting Text}). For
350 example, @kbd{C-q C-s} during incremental search adds the
351 @samp{control-S} character to the search string.
352
353 @item
354 Type @kbd{C-x 8 @key{RET}}, followed by a Unicode name or code-point
355 in hex. This adds the specified character into the search string,
356 similar to the usual @code{insert-char} command (@pxref{Inserting
357 Text}).
358
359 @item
360 @kindex C-^ @r{(Incremental Search)}
361 @findex isearch-toggle-input-method
362 @findex isearch-toggle-specified-input-method
363 Use an input method (@pxref{Input Methods}). If an input method is
364 enabled in the current buffer when you start the search, the same
365 method will be active in the minibuffer when you type the search
366 string. While typing the search string, you can toggle the input
367 method with @kbd{C-\} (@code{isearch-toggle-input-method}). You can
368 also turn on a non-default input method with @kbd{C-^}
369 (@code{isearch-toggle-specified-input-method}), which prompts for the
370 name of the input method. When an input method is active during
371 incremental search, the search prompt includes the input method
372 mnemonic, like this:
373
374 @example
375 I-search [@var{im}]:
376 @end example
377
378 @noindent
379 where @var{im} is the mnemonic of the active input method. Any input
380 method you enable during incremental search remains enabled in the
381 current buffer afterwards.
382 @end itemize
383
384 @kindex M-s o @r{(Incremental Search)}
385 @findex isearch-occur
386 Typing @kbd{M-s o} in incremental search invokes
387 @code{isearch-occur}, which runs @code{occur} with the current search
388 string. @xref{Other Repeating Search, occur}.
389
390 @kindex M-% @r{(Incremental search)}
391 Typing @kbd{M-%} in incremental search invokes @code{query-replace}
392 or @code{query-replace-regexp} (depending on search mode) with the
393 current search string used as the string to replace. A negative
394 prefix argument means to replace backward. @xref{Query Replace}.
395
396 @kindex M-TAB @r{(Incremental search)}
397 Typing @kbd{M-@key{TAB}} in incremental search invokes
398 @code{isearch-complete}, which attempts to complete the search string
399 using the search ring (the previous search strings you used) as a list
400 of completion alternatives. @xref{Completion}. In many operating
401 systems, the @kbd{M-@key{TAB}} key sequence is captured by the window
402 manager; you then need to rebind @code{isearch-complete} to another
403 key sequence if you want to use it (@pxref{Rebinding}).
404
405 @kindex M-s h r @r{(Incremental Search)}
406 @findex isearch-highlight-regexp
407 You can exit the search while leaving the matches for the last
408 search string highlighted on display. To this end, type @kbd{M-s h r}
409 (@code{isearch-highlight-regexp}), which will run
410 @code{highlight-regexp} (@pxref{Highlight Interactively}) passing
411 it the regexp derived from the last search string and prompting you
412 for the face to use for highlighting. To remove the highlighting,
413 type @kbd{M-s h u} (@code{unhighlight-regexp}).
414
415 @cindex incremental search, help on special keys
416 @kindex C-h C-h @r{(Incremental Search)}
417 @findex isearch-help-map
418 @vindex isearch-mode-map
419 When incremental search is active, you can type @kbd{C-h C-h}
420 (@code{isearch-help-map}) to access interactive help options,
421 including a list of special key bindings. These key bindings are part
422 of the keymap @code{isearch-mode-map} (@pxref{Keymaps}).
423
424 @node Not Exiting Isearch
425 @subsection Not Exiting Incremental Search
426
427 This subsection describes how to control whether typing a command not
428 specifically meaningful is searches exits the search before executing
429 the command. It also describes two categories of commands which you
430 can type without exiting the current incremental search, even though
431 they are not themselves part of incremental search.
432
433 @vindex search-exit-option
434 Normally, typing a command that is not bound by the incremental
435 search exits the search before executing the command. Thus, the
436 command operates on the buffer from which you invoked the search.
437 However, if you customize the variable @code{search-exit-option} to
438 @code{nil}, the characters which you type that are not interpreted by
439 the incremental search are simply appended to the search string. This
440 is so you could include in the search string control characters, such
441 as @kbd{C-a}, that would normally exit the search and invoke the
442 command bound to them on the buffer.
443
444 @table @asis
445 @item Prefix Arguments
446 @cindex prefix argument commands, during incremental search
447 @vindex isearch-allow-prefix
448 In incremental search, when you type a command that specifies a
449 prefix argument (@pxref{Arguments}), by default it will apply either
450 to the next action in the search or to the command that exits the
451 search. In other words, entering a prefix argument will not by itself
452 terminate the search.
453
454 In previous versions of Emacs, entering a prefix argument always
455 terminated the search. You can revert to this behavior by setting the
456 variable @code{isearch-allow-prefix} to @code{nil}.
457
458 When @code{isearch-allow-scroll} is non-@code{nil} (see below),
459 prefix arguments always have the default behavior described above,
460 i.e., they don't terminate the search, even if
461 @code{isearch-allow-prefix} is @code{nil}.
462
463 @item Scrolling Commands
464 @cindex scrolling commands, during incremental search
465 @vindex isearch-allow-scroll
466 Normally, scrolling commands exit incremental search. If you change
467 the variable @code{isearch-allow-scroll} to a non-@code{nil} value,
468 that enables the use of the scroll-bar, as well as keyboard scrolling
469 commands like @kbd{C-v}, @kbd{M-v}, and @kbd{C-l} (@pxref{Scrolling}).
470 This applies only to calling these commands via their bound key
471 sequences---typing @kbd{M-x} will still exit the search. You can give
472 prefix arguments to these commands in the usual way. This feature
473 won't let you scroll the current match out of visibility, however.
474
475 The @code{isearch-allow-scroll} feature also affects some other
476 commands, such as @kbd{C-x 2} (@code{split-window-below}) and
477 @kbd{C-x ^} (@code{enlarge-window}), which don't exactly scroll but do
478 affect where the text appears on the screen. It applies to any
479 command whose name has a non-@code{nil} @code{isearch-scroll}
480 property. So you can control which commands are affected by changing
481 these properties.
482
483 @cindex prevent commands from exiting incremental search
484 For example, to make @kbd{C-h l} usable within an incremental search
485 in all future Emacs sessions, use @kbd{C-h c} to find what command it
486 runs (@pxref{Key Help}), which is @code{view-lossage}. Then you can
487 put the following line in your init file (@pxref{Init File}):
488
489 @example
490 (put 'view-lossage 'isearch-scroll t)
491 @end example
492
493 @noindent
494 This feature can be applied to any command that doesn't permanently
495 change point, the buffer contents, the match data, the current buffer,
496 or the selected window and frame. The command must not itself attempt
497 an incremental search. This feature is disabled if
498 @code{isearch-allow-scroll} is @code{nil} (which it is by default).
499 @end table
500
501 @node Isearch Minibuffer
502 @subsection Searching the Minibuffer
503 @cindex minibuffer history, searching
504
505 If you start an incremental search while the minibuffer is active,
506 Emacs searches the contents of the minibuffer. Unlike searching an
507 ordinary buffer, the search string is not shown in the echo area,
508 because that is used to display the minibuffer.
509
510 If an incremental search fails in the minibuffer, it tries searching
511 the minibuffer history. @xref{Minibuffer History}. You can visualize
512 the minibuffer and its history as a series of pages, with the
513 earliest history element on the first page and the current minibuffer
514 on the last page. A forward search, @kbd{C-s}, searches forward to
515 later pages; a reverse search, @kbd{C-r}, searches backwards to
516 earlier pages. Like in ordinary buffer search, a failing search can
517 wrap around, going from the last page to the first page or vice versa.
518
519 When the current match is on a history element, that history element
520 is pulled into the minibuffer. If you exit the incremental search
521 normally (e.g., by typing @key{RET}), it remains in the minibuffer
522 afterwards. Canceling the search, with @kbd{C-g}, restores the
523 contents of the minibuffer when you began the search.
524
525 @node Nonincremental Search
526 @section Nonincremental Search
527 @cindex nonincremental search
528
529 Emacs also has conventional nonincremental search commands, which require
530 you to type the entire search string before searching begins.
531
532 @table @kbd
533 @item C-s @key{RET} @var{string} @key{RET}
534 Search for @var{string}.
535 @item C-r @key{RET} @var{string} @key{RET}
536 Search backward for @var{string}.
537 @end table
538
539 To start a nonincremental search, first type @kbd{C-s @key{RET}}.
540 This enters the minibuffer to read the search string; terminate the
541 string with @key{RET}, and then the search takes place. If the string
542 is not found, the search command signals an error.
543
544 When you type @kbd{C-s @key{RET}}, the @kbd{C-s} invokes incremental
545 search as usual. That command is specially programmed to invoke the
546 command for nonincremental search, if the string you specify is empty.
547 (Such an empty argument would otherwise be useless.) @kbd{C-r
548 @key{RET}} does likewise, invoking the nonincremental
549 backward-searching command.
550
551 @findex search-forward
552 @findex search-backward
553 You can also use two simpler commands, @kbd{M-x search-forward} and
554 @kbd{M-x search-backward}. These commands look for the literal
555 strings you specify, and don't support any of the lax-search features
556 (@pxref{Lax Search}) except case folding.
557
558 @node Word Search
559 @section Word Search
560 @cindex word search
561
562 A @dfn{word search} finds a sequence of words without regard to the
563 type of punctuation between them. For instance, if you enter a search
564 string that consists of two words separated by a single space, the
565 search matches any sequence of those two words separated by one or
566 more spaces, newlines, or other punctuation characters. This is
567 particularly useful for searching text documents, because you don't
568 have to worry whether the words you are looking for are separated by
569 newlines or spaces. Note that major modes for programming languages
570 or other specialized modes can modify the definition of a word to suit
571 their syntactic needs.
572
573 @table @kbd
574 @item M-s w
575 If incremental search is active, toggle word search mode
576 (@code{isearch-toggle-word}); otherwise, begin an incremental forward
577 word search (@code{isearch-forward-word}).
578 @item M-s w @key{RET} @var{words} @key{RET}
579 Search for @var{words}, using a forward nonincremental word search.
580 @item M-s w C-r @key{RET} @var{words} @key{RET}
581 Search backward for @var{words}, using a nonincremental word search.
582 @end table
583
584 @kindex M-s w
585 @findex isearch-forward-word
586 To begin a forward incremental word search, type @kbd{M-s w}. If
587 incremental search is not already active, this runs the command
588 @code{isearch-forward-word}. If incremental search is already active
589 (whether a forward or backward search), @kbd{M-s w} switches to a word
590 search while keeping the direction of the search and the current
591 search string unchanged. You can toggle word search back off by
592 typing @kbd{M-s w} again.
593
594 @findex word-search-forward
595 @findex word-search-backward
596 To begin a nonincremental word search, type @kbd{M-s w @key{RET}}
597 for a forward search, or @kbd{M-s w C-r @key{RET}} for a backward search.
598 These run the commands @code{word-search-forward} and
599 @code{word-search-backward} respectively.
600
601 Incremental and nonincremental word searches differ slightly in the
602 way they find a match. In a nonincremental word search, each word in
603 the search string must exactly match a whole word. In an incremental
604 word search, the matching is more lax: while you are typing the search
605 string, its first and last words need not match whole words. This is
606 so that the matching can proceed incrementally as you type. This
607 additional laxity does not apply to the lazy highlight
608 (@pxref{Incremental Search}), which always matches whole words.
609
610 @kindex M-s M-w
611 @findex eww-search-word
612 @vindex eww-search-prefix
613 Search the Web for the text in region. This command performs an
614 Internet search for the words in region using the search engine whose
615 @acronym{URL} is specified by the variable @code{eww-search-prefix}.
616 @xref{Basics, EWW, , eww, The Emacs Web Wowser Manual}.
617
618 @node Symbol Search
619 @section Symbol Search
620 @cindex symbol search
621
622 A @dfn{symbol search} is much like an ordinary search, except that
623 the boundaries of the search must match the boundaries of a symbol.
624 The meaning of @dfn{symbol} in this context depends on the major mode,
625 and usually refers to a source code token, such as a Lisp symbol in
626 Emacs Lisp mode. For instance, if you perform an incremental symbol
627 search for the Lisp symbol @code{forward-word}, it would not match
628 @code{isearch-forward-word}. This feature is thus mainly useful for
629 searching source code.
630
631 @table @kbd
632 @item M-s _
633 @findex isearch-toggle-symbol
634 If incremental search is active, toggle symbol search mode
635 (@code{isearch-toggle-symbol}); otherwise, begin an incremental
636 forward symbol search (@code{isearch-forward-symbol}).
637 @item M-s .
638 Start a symbol incremental search forward with the symbol found near
639 point added to the search string initially.
640 @item M-s _ @key{RET} @var{symbol} @key{RET}
641 Search forward for @var{symbol}, nonincrementally.
642 @item M-s _ C-r @key{RET} @var{symbol} @key{RET}
643 Search backward for @var{symbol}, nonincrementally.
644 @end table
645
646 @kindex M-s _
647 @kindex M-s .
648 @findex isearch-forward-symbol
649 @findex isearch-forward-symbol-at-point
650 To begin a forward incremental symbol search, type @kbd{M-s _} (or
651 @kbd{M-s .} if the symbol to search is near point). If incremental
652 search is not already active, this runs the command
653 @code{isearch-forward-symbol}. If incremental search is already
654 active, @kbd{M-s _} switches to a symbol search, preserving the
655 direction of the search and the current search string; you can disable
656 symbol search by typing @kbd{M-s _} again. In incremental symbol
657 search, only the beginning of the search string is required to match
658 the beginning of a symbol.
659
660 To begin a nonincremental symbol search, type @kbd{M-s _ @key{RET}}
661 for a forward search, or @kbd{M-s _ C-r @key{RET}} or a backward
662 search. In nonincremental symbol searches, the beginning and end of
663 the search string are required to match the beginning and end of a
664 symbol, respectively.
665
666 @node Regexp Search
667 @section Regular Expression Search
668 @cindex regexp search
669 @cindex search for a regular expression
670
671 A @dfn{regular expression} (or @dfn{regexp} for short) is a pattern
672 that denotes a class of alternative strings to match. Emacs
673 provides both incremental and nonincremental ways to search for a
674 match for a regexp. The syntax of regular expressions is explained in
675 the next section.
676
677 @table @kbd
678 @item C-M-s
679 Begin incremental regexp search (@code{isearch-forward-regexp}).
680 @item C-M-r
681 Begin reverse incremental regexp search (@code{isearch-backward-regexp}).
682 @end table
683
684 @kindex C-M-s
685 @findex isearch-forward-regexp
686 @kindex C-M-r
687 @findex isearch-backward-regexp
688 Incremental search for a regexp is done by typing @kbd{C-M-s}
689 (@code{isearch-forward-regexp}), by invoking @kbd{C-s} with a
690 prefix argument (whose value does not matter), or by typing @kbd{M-r}
691 within a forward incremental search. This command reads a
692 search string incrementally just like @kbd{C-s}, but it treats the
693 search string as a regexp rather than looking for an exact match
694 against the text in the buffer. Each time you add text to the search
695 string, you make the regexp longer, and the new regexp is searched
696 for. To search backward for a regexp, use @kbd{C-M-r}
697 (@code{isearch-backward-regexp}), @kbd{C-r} with a prefix argument,
698 or @kbd{M-r} within a backward incremental search.
699
700 @vindex regexp-search-ring-max
701 All of the special key sequences in an ordinary incremental search
702 (@pxref{Special Isearch}) do similar things in an incremental regexp
703 search. For instance, typing @kbd{C-s} immediately after starting the
704 search retrieves the last incremental search regexp used and searches
705 forward for it. Incremental regexp and non-regexp searches have
706 independent defaults. They also have separate search rings, which you
707 can access with @kbd{M-p} and @kbd{M-n}. The maximum number of search
708 regexps saved in the search ring is determined by the value of
709 @code{regexp-search-ring-max}, 16 by default.
710
711 Unlike ordinary incremental search, incremental regexp search
712 do not use lax space matching by default. To toggle this feature
713 use @kbd{M-s @key{SPC}} (@code{isearch-toggle-lax-whitespace}).
714 Then any @key{SPC} typed in incremental regexp search will match
715 any sequence of one or more whitespace characters. The variable
716 @code{search-whitespace-regexp} specifies the regexp for the lax
717 space matching. @xref{Special Isearch}.
718
719 In some cases, adding characters to the regexp in an incremental
720 regexp search can make the cursor move back and start again. For
721 example, if you have searched for @samp{foo} and you add @samp{\|bar},
722 the cursor backs up in case the first @samp{bar} precedes the first
723 @samp{foo}. @xref{Regexps}.
724
725 Forward and backward regexp search are not symmetrical, because
726 regexp matching in Emacs always operates forward, starting with the
727 beginning of the regexp. Thus, forward regexp search scans forward,
728 trying a forward match at each possible starting position. Backward
729 regexp search scans backward, trying a forward match at each possible
730 starting position. These search methods are not mirror images.
731
732 @findex re-search-forward
733 @findex re-search-backward
734 Nonincremental search for a regexp is done with the commands
735 @code{re-search-forward} and @code{re-search-backward}. You can
736 invoke these with @kbd{M-x}, or by way of incremental regexp search
737 with @kbd{C-M-s @key{RET}} and @kbd{C-M-r @key{RET}}. When you invoke
738 these commands with @kbd{M-x}, they search for the exact regexp you
739 specify, and thus don't support any lax-search features (@pxref{Lax
740 Search}) except case folding.
741
742 If you use the incremental regexp search commands with a prefix
743 argument, they perform ordinary string search, like
744 @code{isearch-forward} and @code{isearch-backward}. @xref{Incremental
745 Search}.
746
747 @node Regexps
748 @section Syntax of Regular Expressions
749 @cindex syntax of regexps
750 @cindex regular expression
751 @cindex regexp
752
753 This manual describes regular expression features that users
754 typically use. @xref{Regular Expressions,,, elisp, The Emacs Lisp
755 Reference Manual}, for additional features used mainly in Lisp
756 programs.
757
758 Regular expressions have a syntax in which a few characters are
759 special constructs and the rest are @dfn{ordinary}. An ordinary
760 character matches that same character and nothing else. The special
761 characters are @samp{$^.*+?[\}. The character @samp{]} is special if
762 it ends a character alternative (see later). The character @samp{-}
763 is special inside a character alternative. Any other character
764 appearing in a regular expression is ordinary, unless a @samp{\}
765 precedes it. (When you use regular expressions in a Lisp program,
766 each @samp{\} must be doubled, see the example near the end of this
767 section.)
768
769 For example, @samp{f} is not a special character, so it is ordinary, and
770 therefore @samp{f} is a regular expression that matches the string
771 @samp{f} and no other string. (It does @emph{not} match the string
772 @samp{ff}.) Likewise, @samp{o} is a regular expression that matches
773 only @samp{o}. (When case distinctions are being ignored, these regexps
774 also match @samp{F} and @samp{O}, but we consider this a generalization
775 of ``the same string'', rather than an exception.)
776
777 Any two regular expressions @var{a} and @var{b} can be concatenated.
778 The result is a regular expression which matches a string if @var{a}
779 matches some amount of the beginning of that string and @var{b}
780 matches the rest of the string. For example, concatenating the
781 regular expressions @samp{f} and @samp{o} gives the regular expression
782 @samp{fo}, which matches only the string @samp{fo}. Still trivial.
783 To do something nontrivial, you need to use one of the special
784 characters. Here is a list of them.
785
786 @table @asis
787 @item @kbd{.}@: @r{(Period)}
788 is a special character that matches any single character except a
789 newline. For example, the regular expressions @samp{a.b} matches any
790 three-character string that begins with @samp{a} and ends with
791 @samp{b}.
792
793 @item @kbd{*}
794 is not a construct by itself; it is a postfix operator that means to
795 match the preceding regular expression repetitively any number of
796 times, as many times as possible. Thus, @samp{o*} matches any number
797 of @samp{o}s, including no @samp{o}s.
798
799 @samp{*} always applies to the @emph{smallest} possible preceding
800 expression. Thus, @samp{fo*} has a repeating @samp{o}, not a repeating
801 @samp{fo}. It matches @samp{f}, @samp{fo}, @samp{foo}, and so on.
802
803 The matcher processes a @samp{*} construct by matching, immediately,
804 as many repetitions as can be found. Then it continues with the rest
805 of the pattern. If that fails, backtracking occurs, discarding some
806 of the matches of the @samp{*}-modified construct in case that makes
807 it possible to match the rest of the pattern. For example, in matching
808 @samp{ca*ar} against the string @samp{caaar}, the @samp{a*} first
809 tries to match all three @samp{a}s; but the rest of the pattern is
810 @samp{ar} and there is only @samp{r} left to match, so this try fails.
811 The next alternative is for @samp{a*} to match only two @samp{a}s.
812 With this choice, the rest of the regexp matches successfully.
813
814 @item @kbd{+}
815 is a postfix operator, similar to @samp{*} except that it must match
816 the preceding expression at least once. Thus, @samp{ca+r} matches the
817 strings @samp{car} and @samp{caaaar} but not the string @samp{cr},
818 whereas @samp{ca*r} matches all three strings.
819
820 @item @kbd{?}
821 is a postfix operator, similar to @samp{*} except that it can match
822 the preceding expression either once or not at all. Thus, @samp{ca?r}
823 matches @samp{car} or @samp{cr}, and nothing else.
824
825 @item @kbd{*?}, @kbd{+?}, @kbd{??}
826 @cindex non-greedy regexp matching
827 are non-@dfn{greedy} variants of the operators above. The normal
828 operators @samp{*}, @samp{+}, @samp{?} match as much as they can, as
829 long as the overall regexp can still match. With a following
830 @samp{?}, they will match as little as possible.
831
832 Thus, both @samp{ab*} and @samp{ab*?} can match the string @samp{a}
833 and the string @samp{abbbb}; but if you try to match them both against
834 the text @samp{abbb}, @samp{ab*} will match it all (the longest valid
835 match), while @samp{ab*?} will match just @samp{a} (the shortest
836 valid match).
837
838 Non-greedy operators match the shortest possible string starting at a
839 given starting point; in a forward search, though, the earliest
840 possible starting point for match is always the one chosen. Thus, if
841 you search for @samp{a.*?$} against the text @samp{abbab} followed by
842 a newline, it matches the whole string. Since it @emph{can} match
843 starting at the first @samp{a}, it does.
844
845 @item @kbd{\@{@var{n}\@}}
846 is a postfix operator specifying @var{n} repetitions---that is, the
847 preceding regular expression must match exactly @var{n} times in a
848 row. For example, @samp{x\@{4\@}} matches the string @samp{xxxx} and
849 nothing else.
850
851 @item @kbd{\@{@var{n},@var{m}\@}}
852 is a postfix operator specifying between @var{n} and @var{m}
853 repetitions---that is, the preceding regular expression must match at
854 least @var{n} times, but no more than @var{m} times. If @var{m} is
855 omitted, then there is no upper limit, but the preceding regular
856 expression must match at least @var{n} times.@* @samp{\@{0,1\@}} is
857 equivalent to @samp{?}. @* @samp{\@{0,\@}} is equivalent to
858 @samp{*}. @* @samp{\@{1,\@}} is equivalent to @samp{+}.
859
860 @item @kbd{[ @dots{} ]}
861 is a @dfn{character set}, beginning with @samp{[} and terminated by
862 @samp{]}.
863
864 In the simplest case, the characters between the two brackets are what
865 this set can match. Thus, @samp{[ad]} matches either one @samp{a} or
866 one @samp{d}, and @samp{[ad]*} matches any string composed of just
867 @samp{a}s and @samp{d}s (including the empty string). It follows that
868 @samp{c[ad]*r} matches @samp{cr}, @samp{car}, @samp{cdr},
869 @samp{caddaar}, etc.
870
871 You can also include character ranges in a character set, by writing the
872 starting and ending characters with a @samp{-} between them. Thus,
873 @samp{[a-z]} matches any lower-case @acronym{ASCII} letter. Ranges may be
874 intermixed freely with individual characters, as in @samp{[a-z$%.]},
875 which matches any lower-case @acronym{ASCII} letter or @samp{$}, @samp{%} or
876 period.
877
878 You can also include certain special @dfn{character classes} in a
879 character set. A @samp{[:} and balancing @samp{:]} enclose a
880 character class inside a character alternative. For instance,
881 @samp{[[:alnum:]]} matches any letter or digit. @xref{Char Classes,,,
882 elisp, The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}, for a list of character
883 classes.
884
885 To include a @samp{]} in a character set, you must make it the first
886 character. For example, @samp{[]a]} matches @samp{]} or @samp{a}. To
887 include a @samp{-}, write @samp{-} as the first or last character of the
888 set, or put it after a range. Thus, @samp{[]-]} matches both @samp{]}
889 and @samp{-}.
890
891 To include @samp{^} in a set, put it anywhere but at the beginning of
892 the set. (At the beginning, it complements the set---see below.)
893
894 When you use a range in case-insensitive search, you should write both
895 ends of the range in upper case, or both in lower case, or both should
896 be non-letters. The behavior of a mixed-case range such as @samp{A-z}
897 is somewhat ill-defined, and it may change in future Emacs versions.
898
899 @item @kbd{[^ @dots{} ]}
900 @samp{[^} begins a @dfn{complemented character set}, which matches any
901 character except the ones specified. Thus, @samp{[^a-z0-9A-Z]} matches
902 all characters @emph{except} @acronym{ASCII} letters and digits.
903
904 @samp{^} is not special in a character set unless it is the first
905 character. The character following the @samp{^} is treated as if it
906 were first (in other words, @samp{-} and @samp{]} are not special there).
907
908 A complemented character set can match a newline, unless newline is
909 mentioned as one of the characters not to match. This is in contrast to
910 the handling of regexps in programs such as @code{grep}.
911
912 @item @kbd{^}
913 is a special character that matches the empty string, but only at the
914 beginning of a line in the text being matched. Otherwise it fails to
915 match anything. Thus, @samp{^foo} matches a @samp{foo} that occurs at
916 the beginning of a line.
917
918 For historical compatibility reasons, @samp{^} can be used with this
919 meaning only at the beginning of the regular expression, or after
920 @samp{\(} or @samp{\|}.
921
922 @item @kbd{$}
923 is similar to @samp{^} but matches only at the end of a line. Thus,
924 @samp{x+$} matches a string of one @samp{x} or more at the end of a line.
925
926 For historical compatibility reasons, @samp{$} can be used with this
927 meaning only at the end of the regular expression, or before @samp{\)}
928 or @samp{\|}.
929
930 @item @kbd{\}
931 has two functions: it quotes the special characters (including
932 @samp{\}), and it introduces additional special constructs.
933
934 Because @samp{\} quotes special characters, @samp{\$} is a regular
935 expression that matches only @samp{$}, and @samp{\[} is a regular
936 expression that matches only @samp{[}, and so on.
937
938 See the following section for the special constructs that begin
939 with @samp{\}.
940 @end table
941
942 Note: for historical compatibility, special characters are treated as
943 ordinary ones if they are in contexts where their special meanings make no
944 sense. For example, @samp{*foo} treats @samp{*} as ordinary since there is
945 no preceding expression on which the @samp{*} can act. It is poor practice
946 to depend on this behavior; it is better to quote the special character anyway,
947 regardless of where it appears.
948
949 As a @samp{\} is not special inside a character alternative, it can
950 never remove the special meaning of @samp{-} or @samp{]}. So you
951 should not quote these characters when they have no special meaning
952 either. This would not clarify anything, since backslashes can
953 legitimately precede these characters where they @emph{have} special
954 meaning, as in @samp{[^\]} (@code{"[^\\]"} for Lisp string syntax),
955 which matches any single character except a backslash.
956
957 @node Regexp Backslash
958 @section Backslash in Regular Expressions
959
960 For the most part, @samp{\} followed by any character matches only
961 that character. However, there are several exceptions: two-character
962 sequences starting with @samp{\} that have special meanings. The
963 second character in the sequence is always an ordinary character when
964 used on its own. Here is a table of @samp{\} constructs.
965
966 @table @kbd
967 @item \|
968 specifies an alternative. Two regular expressions @var{a} and @var{b}
969 with @samp{\|} in between form an expression that matches some text if
970 either @var{a} matches it or @var{b} matches it. It works by trying to
971 match @var{a}, and if that fails, by trying to match @var{b}.
972
973 Thus, @samp{foo\|bar} matches either @samp{foo} or @samp{bar}
974 but no other string.
975
976 @samp{\|} applies to the largest possible surrounding expressions. Only a
977 surrounding @samp{\( @dots{} \)} grouping can limit the grouping power of
978 @samp{\|}.
979
980 Full backtracking capability exists to handle multiple uses of @samp{\|}.
981
982 @item \( @dots{} \)
983 is a grouping construct that serves three purposes:
984
985 @enumerate
986 @item
987 To enclose a set of @samp{\|} alternatives for other operations.
988 Thus, @samp{\(foo\|bar\)x} matches either @samp{foox} or @samp{barx}.
989
990 @item
991 To enclose a complicated expression for the postfix operators @samp{*},
992 @samp{+} and @samp{?} to operate on. Thus, @samp{ba\(na\)*} matches
993 @samp{bananana}, etc., with any (zero or more) number of @samp{na}
994 strings.
995
996 @item
997 To record a matched substring for future reference.
998 @end enumerate
999
1000 This last application is not a consequence of the idea of a
1001 parenthetical grouping; it is a separate feature that is assigned as a
1002 second meaning to the same @samp{\( @dots{} \)} construct. In practice
1003 there is usually no conflict between the two meanings; when there is
1004 a conflict, you can use a shy group.
1005
1006 @item \(?: @dots{} \)
1007 @cindex shy group, in regexp
1008 specifies a shy group that does not record the matched substring;
1009 you can't refer back to it with @samp{\@var{d}} (see below). This is
1010 useful in mechanically combining regular expressions, so that you can
1011 add groups for syntactic purposes without interfering with the
1012 numbering of the groups that are meant to be referred to.
1013
1014 @item \@var{d}
1015 @cindex back reference, in regexp
1016 matches the same text that matched the @var{d}th occurrence of a
1017 @samp{\( @dots{} \)} construct. This is called a @dfn{back
1018 reference}.
1019
1020 After the end of a @samp{\( @dots{} \)} construct, the matcher remembers
1021 the beginning and end of the text matched by that construct. Then,
1022 later on in the regular expression, you can use @samp{\} followed by the
1023 digit @var{d} to mean ``match the same text matched the @var{d}th time
1024 by the @samp{\( @dots{} \)} construct''.
1025
1026 The strings matching the first nine @samp{\( @dots{} \)} constructs
1027 appearing in a regular expression are assigned numbers 1 through 9 in
1028 the order that the open-parentheses appear in the regular expression.
1029 So you can use @samp{\1} through @samp{\9} to refer to the text matched
1030 by the corresponding @samp{\( @dots{} \)} constructs.
1031
1032 For example, @samp{\(.*\)\1} matches any newline-free string that is
1033 composed of two identical halves. The @samp{\(.*\)} matches the first
1034 half, which may be anything, but the @samp{\1} that follows must match
1035 the same exact text.
1036
1037 If a particular @samp{\( @dots{} \)} construct matches more than once
1038 (which can easily happen if it is followed by @samp{*}), only the last
1039 match is recorded.
1040
1041 @item \`
1042 matches the empty string, but only at the beginning of the string or
1043 buffer (or its accessible portion) being matched against.
1044
1045 @item \'
1046 matches the empty string, but only at the end of the string or buffer
1047 (or its accessible portion) being matched against.
1048
1049 @item \=
1050 matches the empty string, but only at point.
1051
1052 @item \b
1053 matches the empty string, but only at the beginning or
1054 end of a word. Thus, @samp{\bfoo\b} matches any occurrence of
1055 @samp{foo} as a separate word. @samp{\bballs?\b} matches
1056 @samp{ball} or @samp{balls} as a separate word.
1057
1058 @samp{\b} matches at the beginning or end of the buffer
1059 regardless of what text appears next to it.
1060
1061 @item \B
1062 matches the empty string, but @emph{not} at the beginning or
1063 end of a word.
1064
1065 @item \<
1066 matches the empty string, but only at the beginning of a word.
1067 @samp{\<} matches at the beginning of the buffer only if a
1068 word-constituent character follows.
1069
1070 @item \>
1071 matches the empty string, but only at the end of a word. @samp{\>}
1072 matches at the end of the buffer only if the contents end with a
1073 word-constituent character.
1074
1075 @item \w
1076 matches any word-constituent character. The syntax table determines
1077 which characters these are. @xref{Syntax Tables,, Syntax Tables,
1078 elisp, The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.
1079
1080 @item \W
1081 matches any character that is not a word-constituent.
1082
1083 @item \_<
1084 matches the empty string, but only at the beginning of a symbol.
1085 A symbol is a sequence of one or more symbol-constituent characters.
1086 A symbol-constituent character is a character whose syntax is either
1087 @samp{w} or @samp{_}. @samp{\_<} matches at the beginning of the
1088 buffer only if a symbol-constituent character follows.
1089
1090 @item \_>
1091 matches the empty string, but only at the end of a symbol. @samp{\_>}
1092 matches at the end of the buffer only if the contents end with a
1093 symbol-constituent character.
1094
1095 @item \s@var{c}
1096 matches any character whose syntax is @var{c}. Here @var{c} is a
1097 character that designates a particular syntax class: thus, @samp{w}
1098 for word constituent, @samp{-} or @samp{ } for whitespace, @samp{.}
1099 for ordinary punctuation, etc. @xref{Syntax Tables,, Syntax Tables,
1100 elisp, The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.
1101
1102 @item \S@var{c}
1103 matches any character whose syntax is not @var{c}.
1104
1105 @cindex categories of characters
1106 @cindex characters which belong to a specific language
1107 @findex describe-categories
1108 @item \c@var{c}
1109 matches any character that belongs to the category @var{c}. For
1110 example, @samp{\cc} matches Chinese characters, @samp{\cg} matches
1111 Greek characters, etc. For the description of the known categories,
1112 type @kbd{M-x describe-categories @key{RET}}.
1113
1114 @item \C@var{c}
1115 matches any character that does @emph{not} belong to category
1116 @var{c}.
1117 @end table
1118
1119 The constructs that pertain to words and syntax are controlled by
1120 the setting of the syntax table. @xref{Syntax Tables,, Syntax Tables,
1121 elisp, The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.
1122
1123 @node Regexp Example
1124 @section Regular Expression Example
1125
1126 Here is an example of a regexp---similar to the regexp that Emacs
1127 uses, by default, to recognize the end of a sentence, not including
1128 the following space (i.e., the variable @code{sentence-end-base}):
1129
1130 @example
1131 @verbatim
1132 [.?!][]\"')}]*
1133 @end verbatim
1134 @end example
1135
1136 @noindent
1137 This contains two parts in succession: a character set matching
1138 period, @samp{?}, or @samp{!}, and a character set matching
1139 close-brackets, quotes, or parentheses, repeated zero or more times.
1140
1141 @node Lax Search
1142 @section Lax Matching During Searching
1143
1144 @cindex lax search
1145 @cindex character equivalence in search
1146 Normally, you'd want search commands to disregard certain minor
1147 differences between the search string you type and the text being
1148 searched. For example, sequences of whitespace characters of
1149 different length are usually perceived as equivalent; letter-case
1150 differences usually don't matter; etc. This is known as
1151 @dfn{character equivalence}.
1152
1153 This section describes the Emacs lax search features, and how to
1154 tailor them to your needs.
1155
1156 @cindex lax space matching in search
1157 @kindex M-s SPC @r{(Incremental search)}
1158 @kindex SPC @r{(Incremental search)}
1159 @findex isearch-toggle-lax-whitespace
1160 @vindex search-whitespace-regexp
1161 By default, search commands perform @dfn{lax space matching}:
1162 each space, or sequence of spaces, matches any sequence of one or more
1163 whitespace characters in the text. (Incremental regexp search has a
1164 separate default; see @ref{Regexp Search}.) Hence, @samp{foo bar}
1165 matches @samp{foo bar}, @samp{foo@w{ }bar}, @samp{foo@w{ }bar}, and
1166 so on (but not @samp{foobar}). More precisely, Emacs matches each
1167 sequence of space characters in the search string to a regular
1168 expression specified by the variable @code{search-whitespace-regexp}.
1169 For example, to make spaces match sequences of newlines as well as
1170 spaces, set it to @samp{"[[:space:]\n]+"}. The default value of this
1171 variable depends on the buffer's major mode; most major modes classify
1172 spaces, tabs, and formfeed characters as whitespace.
1173
1174 If you want whitespace characters to match exactly, you can turn lax
1175 space matching off by typing @kbd{M-s @key{SPC}}
1176 (@code{isearch-toggle-lax-whitespace}) within an incremental search.
1177 Another @kbd{M-s @key{SPC}} turns lax space matching back on. To
1178 disable lax whitespace matching for all searches, change
1179 @code{search-whitespace-regexp} to @code{nil}; then each space in the
1180 search string matches exactly one space.
1181
1182 @cindex case folding in search
1183 @cindex case-sensitivity and search
1184 Searches in Emacs by default ignore the case of the text they are
1185 searching through, if you specify the search string in lower case.
1186 Thus, if you specify searching for @samp{foo}, then @samp{Foo} and
1187 @samp{foo} also match. Regexps, and in particular character sets,
1188 behave likewise: @samp{[ab]} matches @samp{a} or @samp{A} or @samp{b}
1189 or @samp{B}. This feature is known as @dfn{case folding}, and it is
1190 supported in both incremental and non-incremental search modes.
1191
1192 @vindex search-upper-case
1193 An upper-case letter anywhere in the search string makes the search
1194 case-sensitive. Thus, searching for @samp{Foo} does not find
1195 @samp{foo} or @samp{FOO}. This applies to regular expression search
1196 as well as to literal string search. The effect ceases if you delete
1197 the upper-case letter from the search string. The variable
1198 @code{search-upper-case} controls this: if it is non-@code{nil} (the
1199 default), an upper-case character in the search string make the search
1200 case-sensitive; setting it to @code{nil} disables this effect of
1201 upper-case characters.
1202
1203 @vindex case-fold-search
1204 If you set the variable @code{case-fold-search} to @code{nil}, then
1205 all letters must match exactly, including case. This is a per-buffer
1206 variable; altering the variable normally affects only the current buffer,
1207 unless you change its default value. @xref{Locals}.
1208 This variable applies to nonincremental searches also, including those
1209 performed by the replace commands (@pxref{Replace}) and the minibuffer
1210 history matching commands (@pxref{Minibuffer History}).
1211
1212 @kindex M-c @r{(Incremental search)}
1213 @kindex M-s c @r{(Incremental search)}
1214 @findex isearch-toggle-case-fold
1215 Typing @kbd{M-c} or @kbd{M-s c} (@code{isearch-toggle-case-fold})
1216 within an incremental search toggles the case sensitivity of that
1217 search. The effect does not extend beyond the current incremental
1218 search, but it does override the effect of adding or removing an
1219 upper-case letter in the current search.
1220
1221 Several related variables control case-sensitivity of searching and
1222 matching for specific commands or activities. For instance,
1223 @code{tags-case-fold-search} controls case sensitivity for
1224 @code{find-tag}. To find these variables, do @kbd{M-x
1225 apropos-variable @key{RET} case-fold-search @key{RET}}.
1226
1227 @cindex character folding in search
1228 @cindex equivalent character sequences
1229 Case folding disregards case distinctions among characters, making
1230 upper-case characters match lower-case variants, and vice versa. A
1231 generalization of case folding is @dfn{character folding}, which
1232 disregards wider classes of distinctions among similar characters.
1233 For instance, under character folding the letter @code{a} matches all
1234 of its accented cousins like @code{@"a} and @code{@'a}, i.e., the
1235 match disregards the diacritics that distinguish these
1236 variants. In addition, @code{a} matches other characters that
1237 resemble it, or have it as part of their graphical representation,
1238 such as @sc{u+249c parenthesized latin small letter a} and @sc{u+2100
1239 account of} (which looks like a small @code{a} over @code{c}).
1240 Similarly, the @acronym{ASCII} double-quote character @code{"} matches
1241 all the other variants of double quotes defined by the Unicode
1242 standard. Finally, character folding can make a sequence of one or
1243 more characters match another sequence of a different length: for
1244 example, the sequence of two characters @code{ff} matches @sc{u+fb00
1245 latin small ligature ff}. Character sequences that are not identical,
1246 but match under character folding are known as @dfn{equivalent
1247 character sequences}.
1248
1249 @kindex M-s ' @r{(Incremental Search)}
1250 @findex isearch-toggle-character-fold
1251 Search commands in Emacs by default perform character folding, thus
1252 matching equivalent character sequences. You can disable this
1253 behavior by customizing the variable @code{search-default-regexp-mode}
1254 to @code{nil}. @xref{Search Customizations}. Within an incremental
1255 search, typing @kbd{M-s '} (@code{isearch-toggle-character-fold})
1256 toggles character folding, but only for that search. (Replace
1257 commands have a different default, controlled by a separate option;
1258 see @ref{Replacement and Lax Matches}.)
1259
1260 Like with case folding, typing an explicit variant of a character,
1261 such as @code{@"a}, as part of the search string disables character
1262 folding for that search. If you delete such a character from the
1263 search string, this effect ceases.
1264
1265 @node Replace
1266 @section Replacement Commands
1267 @cindex replacement
1268 @cindex search-and-replace commands
1269 @cindex string substitution
1270 @cindex global substitution
1271
1272 Emacs provides several commands for performing search-and-replace
1273 operations. In addition to the simple @kbd{M-x replace-string}
1274 command, there is @kbd{M-%} (@code{query-replace}), which presents
1275 each occurrence of the search pattern and asks you whether to replace
1276 it.
1277
1278 The replace commands normally operate on the text from point to the
1279 end of the buffer. When the region is active, they operate on it
1280 instead (@pxref{Mark}). The basic replace commands replace one
1281 @dfn{search string} (or regexp) with one @dfn{replacement string}. It
1282 is possible to perform several replacements in parallel, using the
1283 command @code{expand-region-abbrevs} (@pxref{Expanding Abbrevs}).
1284
1285 @menu
1286 * Unconditional Replace:: Replacing all matches for a string.
1287 * Regexp Replace:: Replacing all matches for a regexp.
1288 * Replacement and Lax Matches::
1289 Lax searching for text to replace.
1290 * Query Replace:: How to use querying.
1291 @end menu
1292
1293 @node Unconditional Replace
1294 @subsection Unconditional Replacement
1295 @findex replace-string
1296
1297 @table @kbd
1298 @item M-x replace-string @key{RET} @var{string} @key{RET} @var{newstring} @key{RET}
1299 Replace every occurrence of @var{string} with @var{newstring}.
1300 @end table
1301
1302 To replace every instance of @samp{foo} after point with @samp{bar},
1303 use the command @kbd{M-x replace-string} with the two arguments
1304 @samp{foo} and @samp{bar}. Replacement happens only in the text after
1305 point, so if you want to cover the whole buffer you must go to the
1306 beginning first. All occurrences up to the end of the buffer are
1307 replaced; to limit replacement to part of the buffer, activate the
1308 region around that part. When the region is active, replacement is
1309 limited to the region (@pxref{Mark}).
1310
1311 When @code{replace-string} exits, it leaves point at the last
1312 occurrence replaced. It adds the prior position of point (where the
1313 @code{replace-string} command was issued) to the mark ring, without
1314 activating the mark; use @kbd{C-u C-@key{SPC}} to move back there.
1315 @xref{Mark Ring}.
1316
1317 A prefix argument restricts replacement to matches that are
1318 surrounded by word boundaries.
1319
1320 @xref{Replacement and Lax Matches}, for details about
1321 case-sensitivity in replace commands.
1322
1323 @node Regexp Replace
1324 @subsection Regexp Replacement
1325 @findex replace-regexp
1326
1327 The @kbd{M-x replace-string} command replaces exact matches for a
1328 single string. The similar command @kbd{M-x replace-regexp} replaces
1329 any match for a specified regular expression pattern (@pxref{Regexps}).
1330
1331 @table @kbd
1332 @item M-x replace-regexp @key{RET} @var{regexp} @key{RET} @var{newstring} @key{RET}
1333 Replace every match for @var{regexp} with @var{newstring}.
1334 @end table
1335
1336 @cindex back reference, in regexp replacement
1337 In @code{replace-regexp}, the @var{newstring} need not be constant:
1338 it can refer to all or part of what is matched by the @var{regexp}.
1339 @samp{\&} in @var{newstring} stands for the entire match being
1340 replaced. @samp{\@var{d}} in @var{newstring}, where @var{d} is a
1341 digit, stands for whatever matched the @var{d}th parenthesized
1342 grouping in @var{regexp}. (This is called a ``back reference''.)
1343 @samp{\#} refers to the count of replacements already made in this
1344 command, as a decimal number. In the first replacement, @samp{\#}
1345 stands for @samp{0}; in the second, for @samp{1}; and so on. For
1346 example,
1347
1348 @example
1349 M-x replace-regexp @key{RET} c[ad]+r @key{RET} \&-safe @key{RET}
1350 @end example
1351
1352 @noindent
1353 replaces (for example) @samp{cadr} with @samp{cadr-safe} and @samp{cddr}
1354 with @samp{cddr-safe}.
1355
1356 @example
1357 M-x replace-regexp @key{RET} \(c[ad]+r\)-safe @key{RET} \1 @key{RET}
1358 @end example
1359
1360 @noindent
1361 performs the inverse transformation. To include a @samp{\} in the
1362 text to replace with, you must enter @samp{\\}.
1363
1364 If you want to enter part of the replacement string by hand each
1365 time, use @samp{\?} in the replacement string. Each replacement will
1366 ask you to edit the replacement string in the minibuffer, putting
1367 point where the @samp{\?} was.
1368
1369 The remainder of this subsection is intended for specialized tasks
1370 and requires knowledge of Lisp. Most readers can skip it.
1371
1372 You can use Lisp expressions to calculate parts of the
1373 replacement string. To do this, write @samp{\,} followed by the
1374 expression in the replacement string. Each replacement calculates the
1375 value of the expression and converts it to text without quoting (if
1376 it's a string, this means using the string's contents), and uses it in
1377 the replacement string in place of the expression itself. If the
1378 expression is a symbol, one space in the replacement string after the
1379 symbol name goes with the symbol name, so the value replaces them
1380 both.
1381
1382 Inside such an expression, you can use some special sequences.
1383 @samp{\&} and @samp{\@var{n}} refer here, as usual, to the entire
1384 match as a string, and to a submatch as a string. @var{n} may be
1385 multiple digits, and the value of @samp{\@var{n}} is @code{nil} if
1386 subexpression @var{n} did not match. You can also use @samp{\#&} and
1387 @samp{\#@var{n}} to refer to those matches as numbers (this is valid
1388 when the match or submatch has the form of a numeral). @samp{\#} here
1389 too stands for the number of already-completed replacements.
1390
1391 Repeating our example to exchange @samp{x} and @samp{y}, we can thus
1392 do it also this way:
1393
1394 @example
1395 M-x replace-regexp @key{RET} \(x\)\|y @key{RET}
1396 \,(if \1 "y" "x") @key{RET}
1397 @end example
1398
1399 For computing replacement strings for @samp{\,}, the @code{format}
1400 function is often useful (@pxref{Formatting Strings,,, elisp, The Emacs
1401 Lisp Reference Manual}). For example, to add consecutively numbered
1402 strings like @samp{ABC00042} to columns 73 @w{to 80} (unless they are
1403 already occupied), you can use
1404
1405 @example
1406 M-x replace-regexp @key{RET} ^.\@{0,72\@}$ @key{RET}
1407 \,(format "%-72sABC%05d" \& \#) @key{RET}
1408 @end example
1409
1410 @node Replacement and Lax Matches
1411 @subsection Replace Commands and Lax Matches
1412
1413 This subsection describes the behavior of replace commands with
1414 respect to lax matches (@pxref{Lax Search}) and how to customize it.
1415 In general, replace commands mostly default to stricter matching than
1416 their search counterparts.
1417
1418 @cindex lax space matching in replace commands
1419 @vindex replace-lax-whitespace
1420 Unlike incremental search, the replacement commands do not use lax
1421 space matching (@pxref{Lax Search, lax space matching}) by default.
1422 To enable lax space matching for replacement, change the variable
1423 @code{replace-lax-whitespace} to non-@code{nil}. (This only affects
1424 how Emacs finds the text to replace, not the replacement text.)
1425
1426 @vindex replace-regexp-lax-whitespace
1427 A companion variable @code{replace-regexp-lax-whitespace} controls
1428 whether @code{query-replace-regexp} uses lax whitespace matching when
1429 searching for patterns.
1430
1431 @cindex case folding in replace commands
1432 If the first argument of a replace command is all lower case, the
1433 command ignores case while searching for occurrences to
1434 replace---provided @code{case-fold-search} is non-@code{nil}. If
1435 @code{case-fold-search} is set to @code{nil}, case is always significant
1436 in all searches.
1437
1438 @vindex case-replace
1439 In addition, when the @var{newstring} argument is all or partly lower
1440 case, replacement commands try to preserve the case pattern of each
1441 occurrence. Thus, the command
1442
1443 @example
1444 M-x replace-string @key{RET} foo @key{RET} bar @key{RET}
1445 @end example
1446
1447 @noindent
1448 replaces a lower case @samp{foo} with a lower case @samp{bar}, an
1449 all-caps @samp{FOO} with @samp{BAR}, and a capitalized @samp{Foo} with
1450 @samp{Bar}. (These three alternatives---lower case, all caps, and
1451 capitalized, are the only ones that @code{replace-string} can
1452 distinguish.)
1453
1454 If upper-case letters are used in the replacement string, they remain
1455 upper case every time that text is inserted. If upper-case letters are
1456 used in the first argument, the second argument is always substituted
1457 exactly as given, with no case conversion. Likewise, if either
1458 @code{case-replace} or @code{case-fold-search} is set to @code{nil},
1459 replacement is done without case conversion.
1460
1461 @cindex character folding in replace commands
1462 The replacement commands by default do not use character folding
1463 (@pxref{Lax Search, character folding}) when looking for the text to
1464 replace. To enable character folding for matching in
1465 @code{query-replace} and @code{replace-string}, set the variable
1466 @code{replace-character-fold} to a non-@code{nil} value. (This
1467 setting does not affect the replacement text, only how Emacs finds the
1468 text to replace. It also doesn't affect @code{replace-regexp}.)
1469
1470 @node Query Replace
1471 @subsection Query Replace
1472 @cindex query replace
1473
1474 @table @kbd
1475 @item M-% @var{string} @key{RET} @var{newstring} @key{RET}
1476 Replace some occurrences of @var{string} with @var{newstring}.
1477 @item C-M-% @var{regexp} @key{RET} @var{newstring} @key{RET}
1478 Replace some matches for @var{regexp} with @var{newstring}.
1479 @end table
1480
1481 @kindex M-%
1482 @findex query-replace
1483 If you want to change only some of the occurrences of @samp{foo} to
1484 @samp{bar}, not all of them, use @kbd{M-%} (@code{query-replace}).
1485 This command finds occurrences of @samp{foo} one by one, displays each
1486 occurrence and asks you whether to replace it. Aside from querying,
1487 @code{query-replace} works just like @code{replace-string}
1488 (@pxref{Unconditional Replace}). In particular, it preserves case
1489 provided @code{case-replace} is non-@code{nil}, as it normally is
1490 (@pxref{Replacement and Lax Matches}). A numeric argument means to
1491 consider only occurrences that are bounded by word-delimiter
1492 characters. A negative prefix argument replaces backward.
1493
1494 @kindex C-M-%
1495 @findex query-replace-regexp
1496 @kbd{C-M-%} performs regexp search and replace (@code{query-replace-regexp}).
1497 It works like @code{replace-regexp} except that it queries
1498 like @code{query-replace}.
1499
1500 @vindex query-replace-from-to-separator
1501 You can reuse earlier replacements with these commands. When
1502 @code{query-replace} or @code{query-replace-regexp} prompts for the
1503 search string, use @kbd{M-p} and @kbd{M-n} to show previous
1504 replacements in the form @samp{@var{from} -> @var{to}}, where
1505 @var{from} is the search pattern, @var{to} is its replacement, and the
1506 separator between them is determined by the value of the variable
1507 @code{query-replace-from-to-separator}. Type @key{RET} to select the
1508 desired replacement.
1509
1510 @cindex faces for highlighting query replace
1511 @cindex query-replace face
1512 @cindex lazy-highlight face, in replace
1513 @vindex query-replace-highlight
1514 @vindex query-replace-lazy-highlight
1515 @vindex query-replace-show-replacement
1516 These commands highlight the current match using the face
1517 @code{query-replace}. You can disable this highlight by setting the
1518 variable @code{query-replace-highlight} to @code{nil}. They highlight
1519 other matches using @code{lazy-highlight} just like incremental search
1520 (@pxref{Incremental Search}); this can be disabled by setting
1521 @code{query-replace-lazy-highlight} to @code{nil}. By default,
1522 @code{query-replace-regexp} will show the substituted replacement
1523 string for the current match in the minibuffer. If you want to keep
1524 special sequences @samp{\&} and @samp{\@var{n}} unexpanded, customize
1525 @code{query-replace-show-replacement} variable.
1526
1527 @vindex query-replace-skip-read-only
1528 The variable @code{query-replace-skip-read-only}, if set
1529 non-@code{nil}, will cause replacement commands to ignore matches in
1530 read-only text. The default is not to ignore them.
1531
1532 The characters you can type when you are shown a match for the string
1533 or regexp are:
1534
1535 @ignore @c Not worth it.
1536 @kindex SPC @r{(query-replace)}
1537 @kindex DEL @r{(query-replace)}
1538 @kindex , @r{(query-replace)}
1539 @kindex RET @r{(query-replace)}
1540 @kindex . @r{(query-replace)}
1541 @kindex ! @r{(query-replace)}
1542 @kindex ^ @r{(query-replace)}
1543 @kindex C-r @r{(query-replace)}
1544 @kindex C-w @r{(query-replace)}
1545 @kindex C-l @r{(query-replace)}
1546 @end ignore
1547
1548 @c WideCommands
1549 @table @kbd
1550 @item @key{SPC}
1551 @itemx y
1552 to replace the occurrence with @var{newstring}.
1553
1554 @item @key{DEL}
1555 @itemx @key{Delete}
1556 @itemx @key{BACKSPACE}
1557 @itemx n
1558 to skip to the next occurrence without replacing this one.
1559
1560 @item , @r{(Comma)}
1561 to replace this occurrence and display the result. You are then asked
1562 for another input character to say what to do next. Since the
1563 replacement has already been made, @key{DEL} and @key{SPC} are
1564 equivalent in this situation; both move to the next occurrence.
1565
1566 You can type @kbd{C-r} at this point (see below) to alter the replaced
1567 text. You can also type @kbd{C-x u} to undo the replacement; this exits
1568 the @code{query-replace}, so if you want to do further replacement you
1569 must use @kbd{C-x @key{ESC} @key{ESC} @key{RET}} to restart
1570 (@pxref{Repetition}).
1571
1572 @item @key{RET}
1573 @itemx q
1574 to exit without doing any more replacements.
1575
1576 @item .@: @r{(Period)}
1577 to replace this occurrence and then exit without searching for more
1578 occurrences.
1579
1580 @item !
1581 to replace all remaining occurrences without asking again.
1582
1583 @item ^
1584 to go back to the position of the previous occurrence (or what used to
1585 be an occurrence), in case you changed it by mistake or want to
1586 reexamine it.
1587
1588 @item C-r
1589 to enter a recursive editing level, in case the occurrence needs to be
1590 edited rather than just replaced with @var{newstring}. When you are
1591 done, exit the recursive editing level with @kbd{C-M-c} to proceed to
1592 the next occurrence. @xref{Recursive Edit}.
1593
1594 @item C-w
1595 to delete the occurrence, and then enter a recursive editing level as in
1596 @kbd{C-r}. Use the recursive edit to insert text to replace the deleted
1597 occurrence of @var{string}. When done, exit the recursive editing level
1598 with @kbd{C-M-c} to proceed to the next occurrence.
1599
1600 @item e
1601 to edit the replacement string in the minibuffer. When you exit the
1602 minibuffer by typing @key{RET}, the minibuffer contents replace the
1603 current occurrence of the pattern. They also become the new
1604 replacement string for any further occurrences.
1605
1606 @item C-l
1607 to redisplay the screen. Then you must type another character to
1608 specify what to do with this occurrence.
1609
1610 @item Y @r{(Upper-case)}
1611 to replace all remaining occurrences in all remaining buffers in
1612 multi-buffer replacements (like the Dired @key{Q} command that performs
1613 query replace on selected files). It answers this question and all
1614 subsequent questions in the series with ``yes'', without further
1615 user interaction.
1616
1617 @item N @r{(Upper-case)}
1618 to skip to the next buffer in multi-buffer replacements without
1619 replacing remaining occurrences in the current buffer. It answers
1620 this question ``no'', gives up on the questions for the current buffer,
1621 and continues to the next buffer in the sequence.
1622
1623 @item C-h
1624 @itemx ?
1625 @itemx @key{F1}
1626 to display a message summarizing these options. Then you must type
1627 another character to specify what to do with this occurrence.
1628 @end table
1629
1630 Aside from this, any other character exits the @code{query-replace},
1631 and is then reread as part of a key sequence. Thus, if you type
1632 @kbd{C-k}, it exits the @code{query-replace} and then kills to end of
1633 line. In particular, @kbd{C-g} simply exits the @code{query-replace}.
1634
1635 To restart a @code{query-replace} once it is exited, use @kbd{C-x
1636 @key{ESC} @key{ESC}}, which repeats the @code{query-replace} because it
1637 used the minibuffer to read its arguments. @xref{Repetition, C-x ESC
1638 ESC}.
1639
1640 @cindex invisible text, and query-replace
1641 The option @code{search-invisible} determines how @code{query-replace}
1642 treats invisible text. @xref{Outline Search}.
1643
1644 @xref{Operating on Files}, for the Dired @kbd{Q} command which
1645 performs query replace on selected files. See also @ref{Transforming
1646 File Names}, for Dired commands to rename, copy, or link files by
1647 replacing regexp matches in file names.
1648
1649 @node Other Repeating Search
1650 @section Other Search-and-Loop Commands
1651
1652 Here are some other commands that find matches for a regular
1653 expression. They all ignore case in matching, if the pattern contains
1654 no upper-case letters and @code{case-fold-search} is non-@code{nil}.
1655 Aside from @code{occur} and its variants, all operate on the text from
1656 point to the end of the buffer, or on the region if it is active.
1657
1658 @findex list-matching-lines
1659 @findex occur
1660 @findex multi-occur
1661 @findex multi-occur-in-matching-buffers
1662 @findex how-many
1663 @findex flush-lines
1664 @findex keep-lines
1665
1666 @table @kbd
1667 @item M-x multi-isearch-buffers
1668 Prompt for one or more buffer names, ending with @key{RET}; then,
1669 begin a multi-buffer incremental search in those buffers. (If the
1670 search fails in one buffer, the next @kbd{C-s} tries searching the
1671 next specified buffer, and so forth.) With a prefix argument, prompt
1672 for a regexp and begin a multi-buffer incremental search in buffers
1673 matching that regexp.
1674
1675 @item M-x multi-isearch-buffers-regexp
1676 This command is just like @code{multi-isearch-buffers}, except it
1677 performs an incremental regexp search.
1678
1679 @item M-x multi-isearch-files
1680 Prompt for one or more file names, ending with @key{RET}; then,
1681 begin a multi-file incremental search in those files. (If the
1682 search fails in one file, the next @kbd{C-s} tries searching the
1683 next specified file, and so forth.) With a prefix argument, prompt
1684 for a regexp and begin a multi-file incremental search in files
1685 matching that regexp.
1686
1687 @item M-x multi-isearch-files-regexp
1688 This command is just like @code{multi-isearch-files}, except it
1689 performs an incremental regexp search.
1690
1691 In some modes that set the buffer-local variable
1692 @code{multi-isearch-next-buffer-function} (e.g., in Change Log mode)
1693 a multi-file incremental search is activated automatically.
1694
1695 @cindex Occur mode
1696 @cindex mode, Occur
1697 @cindex match (face name)
1698 @vindex list-matching-lines-default-context-lines
1699 @item M-x occur
1700 Prompt for a regexp, and display a list showing each line in the
1701 buffer that contains a match for it. The text that matched is
1702 highlighted using the @code{match} face. To limit the search to part
1703 of the buffer, narrow to that part (@pxref{Narrowing}). A numeric
1704 argument @var{n} specifies that @var{n} lines of context are to be
1705 displayed before and after each matching line. The default number of
1706 context lines is specified by the variable
1707 @code{list-matching-lines-default-context-lines}.
1708
1709 @kindex RET @r{(Occur mode)}
1710 @kindex o @r{(Occur mode)}
1711 @kindex C-o @r{(Occur mode)}
1712 In the @file{*Occur*} buffer, you can click on each entry, or move
1713 point there and type @key{RET}, to visit the corresponding position in
1714 the buffer that was searched. @kbd{o} and @kbd{C-o} display the match
1715 in another window; @kbd{C-o} does not select it. Alternatively, you
1716 can use the @kbd{C-x `} (@code{next-error}) command to visit the
1717 occurrences one by one (@pxref{Compilation Mode}).
1718
1719 @cindex Occur Edit mode
1720 @cindex mode, Occur Edit
1721 Typing @kbd{e} in the @file{*Occur*} buffer switches to Occur Edit
1722 mode, in which edits made to the entries are also applied to the text
1723 in the originating buffer. Type @kbd{C-c C-c} to return to Occur
1724 mode.
1725
1726 The command @kbd{M-x list-matching-lines} is a synonym for @kbd{M-x
1727 occur}.
1728
1729 @kindex M-s o
1730 @item M-s o
1731 Run @code{occur} using the search string of the last incremental
1732 string search. You can also run @kbd{M-s o} when an incremental
1733 search is active; this uses the current search string.
1734
1735 @item M-x multi-occur
1736 This command is just like @code{occur}, except it is able to search
1737 through multiple buffers. It asks you to specify the buffer names one
1738 by one.
1739
1740 @item M-x multi-occur-in-matching-buffers
1741 This command is similar to @code{multi-occur}, except the buffers to
1742 search are specified by a regular expression that matches visited file
1743 names. With a prefix argument, it uses the regular expression to
1744 match buffer names instead.
1745
1746 @item M-x how-many
1747 Prompt for a regexp, and print the number of matches for it in the
1748 buffer after point. If the region is active, this operates on the
1749 region instead.
1750
1751 @item M-x flush-lines
1752 Prompt for a regexp, and delete each line that contains a match for
1753 it, operating on the text after point. This command deletes the
1754 current line if it contains a match starting after point. If the
1755 region is active, it operates on the region instead; if a line
1756 partially contained in the region contains a match entirely contained
1757 in the region, it is deleted.
1758
1759 If a match is split across lines, @code{flush-lines} deletes all those
1760 lines. It deletes the lines before starting to look for the next
1761 match; hence, it ignores a match starting on the same line at which
1762 another match ended.
1763
1764 @item M-x keep-lines
1765 Prompt for a regexp, and delete each line that @emph{does not} contain
1766 a match for it, operating on the text after point. If point is not at
1767 the beginning of a line, this command always keeps the current line.
1768 If the region is active, the command operates on the region instead;
1769 it never deletes lines that are only partially contained in the region
1770 (a newline that ends a line counts as part of that line).
1771
1772 If a match is split across lines, this command keeps all those lines.
1773 @end table
1774
1775 @node Search Customizations
1776 @section Tailoring Search to Your Needs
1777 @cindex search customizations
1778
1779 This section describes miscellaneous search-related customizations
1780 not described elsewhere.
1781
1782 @cindex default search mode
1783 @cindex search mode, default
1784 The default search mode for the incremental search is specified by
1785 the variable @code{search-default-regexp-mode}. It can be @code{nil},
1786 @code{t}, or a function. If it is @code{nil}, the default mode is to
1787 do literal searches without character folding, but with case folding
1788 and lax-whitespace matches as determined by @code{case-fold-search}
1789 and @code{search-whitespace-regexp}, respectively (@pxref{Lax
1790 Search}). If the value is @code{t}, incremental search defaults to
1791 regexp searches. The default value specifies a function that causes
1792 the default search mode to perform character folding in addition to
1793 case folding and lax-whitespace matching.
1794
1795 @vindex search-highlight
1796 The current match of an on-going incremental search is highlighted
1797 using the @code{isearch} face. This highlighting can be disabled by
1798 setting the variable @code{search-highlight} to @code{nil}.
1799
1800 @cindex lazy highlighting customizations
1801 @vindex isearch-lazy-highlight
1802 @cindex lazy-highlight face
1803 The other matches for the search string that are visible on display
1804 are highlighted using the @code{lazy-highlight} face. Setting the
1805 variable @code{isearch-lazy-highlight} to @code{nil} disables this
1806 highlighting. Here are some other variables that customize the lazy
1807 highlighting:
1808
1809 @table @code
1810 @item lazy-highlight-initial-delay
1811 Time in seconds to wait before highlighting visible matches.
1812
1813 @item lazy-highlight-interval
1814 Time in seconds between highlighting successive matches.
1815
1816 @item lazy-highlight-max-at-a-time
1817 The maximum number of matches to highlight before checking for input.
1818 A large number can take some time to highlight, so if you want to
1819 continue searching and type @kbd{C-s} or @kbd{C-r} during that time,
1820 Emacs will not respond until it finishes highlighting all those
1821 matches. Thus, smaller values make Emacs more responsive.
1822 @end table
1823
1824 @vindex search-nonincremental-instead
1825 Normally, entering @key{RET} within incremental search when the
1826 search string is empty launches a nonincremental search. (Actually,
1827 it lets you edit the search string, and the next @key{RET} does the
1828 search.) However, if you customize the variable
1829 @code{search-nonincremental-instead} to @code{nil}, typing @key{RET}
1830 will always exit the incremental search, even if the search string is
1831 empty.
1832
1833 @vindex isearch-hide-immediately
1834 By default, incremental search and query-replace commands match
1835 invisible text, but hide any such matches as soon as the current match
1836 moves off the invisible text. If you customize the variable
1837 @code{isearch-hide-immediately} to @code{nil}, any invisible text
1838 where matches were found stays on display until the search or the
1839 replace command exits.
1840
1841 @cindex search display on slow terminals
1842 @vindex search-slow-speed
1843 @vindex search-slow-window-lines
1844 Searching incrementally on slow terminals, such as displays
1845 connected to remote machines over slow connection, could be annoying
1846 due to the need to redraw large portions of the display as the search
1847 proceeds. Emacs provides a special display mode for slow terminals,
1848 whereby search pops up a separate small window and displays the text
1849 surrounding the match in that window. Small windows display faster,
1850 so the annoying effect of slow speed is alleviated. The variable
1851 @code{search-slow-speed} determines the baud rate threshold below
1852 which Emacs will use this display mode. The variable
1853 @code{search-slow-window-lines} controls the number of lines in the
1854 window Emacs pops up for displaying the search results; the default is
1855 1 line. Normally, this window will pop up at the bottom of the window
1856 that displays the buffer where you start searching, bit if the value
1857 of @code{search-slow-window-lines} is negative, that means to put the
1858 window at the top and give it the number of lines that is the absolute
1859 value of that value.