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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, 2001-2011
4 @c Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5 @c See the file elisp.texi for copying conditions.
6 @setfilename ../../info/commands
7 @node Command Loop, Keymaps, Minibuffers, Top
8 @chapter Command Loop
9 @cindex editor command loop
10 @cindex command loop
11
12 When you run Emacs, it enters the @dfn{editor command loop} almost
13 immediately. This loop reads key sequences, executes their definitions,
14 and displays the results. In this chapter, we describe how these things
15 are done, and the subroutines that allow Lisp programs to do them.
16
17 @menu
18 * Command Overview:: How the command loop reads commands.
19 * Defining Commands:: Specifying how a function should read arguments.
20 * Interactive Call:: Calling a command, so that it will read arguments.
21 * Distinguish Interactive:: Making a command distinguish interactive calls.
22 * Command Loop Info:: Variables set by the command loop for you to examine.
23 * Adjusting Point:: Adjustment of point after a command.
24 * Input Events:: What input looks like when you read it.
25 * Reading Input:: How to read input events from the keyboard or mouse.
26 * Special Events:: Events processed immediately and individually.
27 * Waiting:: Waiting for user input or elapsed time.
28 * Quitting:: How @kbd{C-g} works. How to catch or defer quitting.
29 * Prefix Command Arguments:: How the commands to set prefix args work.
30 * Recursive Editing:: Entering a recursive edit,
31 and why you usually shouldn't.
32 * Disabling Commands:: How the command loop handles disabled commands.
33 * Command History:: How the command history is set up, and how accessed.
34 * Keyboard Macros:: How keyboard macros are implemented.
35 @end menu
36
37 @node Command Overview
38 @section Command Loop Overview
39
40 The first thing the command loop must do is read a key sequence, which
41 is a sequence of events that translates into a command. It does this by
42 calling the function @code{read-key-sequence}. Your Lisp code can also
43 call this function (@pxref{Key Sequence Input}). Lisp programs can also
44 do input at a lower level with @code{read-event} (@pxref{Reading One
45 Event}) or discard pending input with @code{discard-input}
46 (@pxref{Event Input Misc}).
47
48 The key sequence is translated into a command through the currently
49 active keymaps. @xref{Key Lookup}, for information on how this is done.
50 The result should be a keyboard macro or an interactively callable
51 function. If the key is @kbd{M-x}, then it reads the name of another
52 command, which it then calls. This is done by the command
53 @code{execute-extended-command} (@pxref{Interactive Call}).
54
55 Prior to executing the command, Emacs runs @code{undo-boundary} to
56 create an undo boundary. @xref{Maintaining Undo}.
57
58 To execute a command, Emacs first reads its arguments by calling
59 @code{command-execute} (@pxref{Interactive Call}). For commands
60 written in Lisp, the @code{interactive} specification says how to read
61 the arguments. This may use the prefix argument (@pxref{Prefix
62 Command Arguments}) or may read with prompting in the minibuffer
63 (@pxref{Minibuffers}). For example, the command @code{find-file} has
64 an @code{interactive} specification which says to read a file name
65 using the minibuffer. The function body of @code{find-file} does not
66 use the minibuffer, so if you call @code{find-file} as a function from
67 Lisp code, you must supply the file name string as an ordinary Lisp
68 function argument.
69
70 If the command is a string or vector (i.e., a keyboard macro) then
71 @code{execute-kbd-macro} is used to execute it. You can call this
72 function yourself (@pxref{Keyboard Macros}).
73
74 To terminate the execution of a running command, type @kbd{C-g}. This
75 character causes @dfn{quitting} (@pxref{Quitting}).
76
77 @defvar pre-command-hook
78 The editor command loop runs this normal hook before each command. At
79 that time, @code{this-command} contains the command that is about to
80 run, and @code{last-command} describes the previous command.
81 @xref{Command Loop Info}.
82 @end defvar
83
84 @defvar post-command-hook
85 The editor command loop runs this normal hook after each command
86 (including commands terminated prematurely by quitting or by errors),
87 and also when the command loop is first entered. At that time,
88 @code{this-command} refers to the command that just ran, and
89 @code{last-command} refers to the command before that.
90 @end defvar
91
92 Quitting is suppressed while running @code{pre-command-hook} and
93 @code{post-command-hook}. If an error happens while executing one of
94 these hooks, it terminates execution of the hook, and clears the hook
95 variable to @code{nil} so as to prevent an infinite loop of errors.
96
97 A request coming into the Emacs server (@pxref{Emacs Server,,,
98 emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}) runs these two hooks just as a keyboard
99 command does.
100
101 @node Defining Commands
102 @section Defining Commands
103 @cindex defining commands
104 @cindex commands, defining
105 @cindex functions, making them interactive
106 @cindex interactive function
107
108 The special form @code{interactive} turns a Lisp function into a
109 command. The @code{interactive} form must be located at top-level in
110 the function body (usually as the first form in the body), or in the
111 @code{interactive-form} property of the function symbol. When the
112 @code{interactive} form is located in the function body, it does
113 nothing when actually executed. Its presence serves as a flag, which
114 tells the Emacs command loop that the function can be called
115 interactively. The argument of the @code{interactive} form controls
116 the reading of arguments for an interactive call.
117
118 @menu
119 * Using Interactive:: General rules for @code{interactive}.
120 * Interactive Codes:: The standard letter-codes for reading arguments
121 in various ways.
122 * Interactive Examples:: Examples of how to read interactive arguments.
123 @end menu
124
125 @node Using Interactive
126 @subsection Using @code{interactive}
127 @cindex arguments, interactive entry
128
129 This section describes how to write the @code{interactive} form that
130 makes a Lisp function an interactively-callable command, and how to
131 examine a command's @code{interactive} form.
132
133 @defspec interactive arg-descriptor
134 This special form declares that a function is a command, and that it
135 may therefore be called interactively (via @kbd{M-x} or by entering a
136 key sequence bound to it). The argument @var{arg-descriptor} declares
137 how to compute the arguments to the command when the command is called
138 interactively.
139
140 A command may be called from Lisp programs like any other function, but
141 then the caller supplies the arguments and @var{arg-descriptor} has no
142 effect.
143
144 @cindex @code{interactive-form}, function property
145 The @code{interactive} form must be located at top-level in the
146 function body, or in the function symbol's @code{interactive-form}
147 property (@pxref{Symbol Plists}). It has its effect because the
148 command loop looks for it before calling the function
149 (@pxref{Interactive Call}). Once the function is called, all its body
150 forms are executed; at this time, if the @code{interactive} form
151 occurs within the body, the form simply returns @code{nil} without
152 even evaluating its argument.
153
154 By convention, you should put the @code{interactive} form in the
155 function body, as the first top-level form. If there is an
156 @code{interactive} form in both the @code{interactive-form} symbol
157 property and the function body, the former takes precedence. The
158 @code{interactive-form} symbol property can be used to add an
159 interactive form to an existing function, or change how its arguments
160 are processed interactively, without redefining the function.
161 @end defspec
162
163 There are three possibilities for the argument @var{arg-descriptor}:
164
165 @itemize @bullet
166 @item
167 It may be omitted or @code{nil}; then the command is called with no
168 arguments. This leads quickly to an error if the command requires one
169 or more arguments.
170
171 @item
172 It may be a string; its contents are a sequence of elements separated
173 by newlines, one for each parameter@footnote{Some elements actually
174 supply two parameters.}. Each element consists of a code character
175 (@pxref{Interactive Codes}) optionally followed by a prompt (which
176 some code characters use and some ignore). Here is an example:
177
178 @smallexample
179 (interactive "P\nbFrobnicate buffer: ")
180 @end smallexample
181
182 @noindent
183 The code letter @samp{P} sets the command's first argument to the raw
184 command prefix (@pxref{Prefix Command Arguments}). @samp{bFrobnicate
185 buffer: } prompts the user with @samp{Frobnicate buffer: } to enter
186 the name of an existing buffer, which becomes the second and final
187 argument.
188
189 @c Emacs 19 feature
190 The prompt string can use @samp{%} to include previous argument values
191 (starting with the first argument) in the prompt. This is done using
192 @code{format} (@pxref{Formatting Strings}). For example, here is how
193 you could read the name of an existing buffer followed by a new name to
194 give to that buffer:
195
196 @smallexample
197 @group
198 (interactive "bBuffer to rename: \nsRename buffer %s to: ")
199 @end group
200 @end smallexample
201
202 @cindex @samp{*} in @code{interactive}
203 @cindex read-only buffers in interactive
204 If @samp{*} appears at the beginning of the string, then an error is
205 signaled if the buffer is read-only.
206
207 @cindex @samp{@@} in @code{interactive}
208 @c Emacs 19 feature
209 If @samp{@@} appears at the beginning of the string, and if the key
210 sequence used to invoke the command includes any mouse events, then
211 the window associated with the first of those events is selected
212 before the command is run.
213
214 @cindex @samp{^} in @code{interactive}
215 @cindex shift-selection, and @code{interactive} spec
216 If @samp{^} appears at the beginning of the string, and if the command
217 was invoked through @dfn{shift-translation}, set the mark and activate
218 the region temporarily, or extend an already active region, before the
219 command is run. If the command was invoked without shift-translation,
220 and the region is temporarily active, deactivate the region before the
221 command is run. Shift-translation is controlled on the user level by
222 @code{shift-select-mode}; see @ref{Shift Selection,,, emacs, The GNU
223 Emacs Manual}.
224
225 You can use @samp{*}, @samp{@@}, and @code{^} together; the order does
226 not matter. Actual reading of arguments is controlled by the rest of
227 the prompt string (starting with the first character that is not
228 @samp{*}, @samp{@@}, or @samp{^}).
229
230 @item
231 It may be a Lisp expression that is not a string; then it should be a
232 form that is evaluated to get a list of arguments to pass to the
233 command. Usually this form will call various functions to read input
234 from the user, most often through the minibuffer (@pxref{Minibuffers})
235 or directly from the keyboard (@pxref{Reading Input}).
236
237 Providing point or the mark as an argument value is also common, but
238 if you do this @emph{and} read input (whether using the minibuffer or
239 not), be sure to get the integer values of point or the mark after
240 reading. The current buffer may be receiving subprocess output; if
241 subprocess output arrives while the command is waiting for input, it
242 could relocate point and the mark.
243
244 Here's an example of what @emph{not} to do:
245
246 @smallexample
247 (interactive
248 (list (region-beginning) (region-end)
249 (read-string "Foo: " nil 'my-history)))
250 @end smallexample
251
252 @noindent
253 Here's how to avoid the problem, by examining point and the mark after
254 reading the keyboard input:
255
256 @smallexample
257 (interactive
258 (let ((string (read-string "Foo: " nil 'my-history)))
259 (list (region-beginning) (region-end) string)))
260 @end smallexample
261
262 @strong{Warning:} the argument values should not include any data
263 types that can't be printed and then read. Some facilities save
264 @code{command-history} in a file to be read in the subsequent
265 sessions; if a command's arguments contain a data type that prints
266 using @samp{#<@dots{}>} syntax, those facilities won't work.
267
268 There are, however, a few exceptions: it is ok to use a limited set of
269 expressions such as @code{(point)}, @code{(mark)},
270 @code{(region-beginning)}, and @code{(region-end)}, because Emacs
271 recognizes them specially and puts the expression (rather than its
272 value) into the command history. To see whether the expression you
273 wrote is one of these exceptions, run the command, then examine
274 @code{(car command-history)}.
275 @end itemize
276
277 @cindex examining the @code{interactive} form
278 @defun interactive-form function
279 This function returns the @code{interactive} form of @var{function}.
280 If @var{function} is an interactively callable function
281 (@pxref{Interactive Call}), the value is the command's
282 @code{interactive} form @code{(interactive @var{spec})}, which
283 specifies how to compute its arguments. Otherwise, the value is
284 @code{nil}. If @var{function} is a symbol, its function definition is
285 used.
286 @end defun
287
288 @node Interactive Codes
289 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
290 @subsection Code Characters for @code{interactive}
291 @cindex interactive code description
292 @cindex description for interactive codes
293 @cindex codes, interactive, description of
294 @cindex characters for interactive codes
295
296 The code character descriptions below contain a number of key words,
297 defined here as follows:
298
299 @table @b
300 @item Completion
301 @cindex interactive completion
302 Provide completion. @key{TAB}, @key{SPC}, and @key{RET} perform name
303 completion because the argument is read using @code{completing-read}
304 (@pxref{Completion}). @kbd{?} displays a list of possible completions.
305
306 @item Existing
307 Require the name of an existing object. An invalid name is not
308 accepted; the commands to exit the minibuffer do not exit if the current
309 input is not valid.
310
311 @item Default
312 @cindex default argument string
313 A default value of some sort is used if the user enters no text in the
314 minibuffer. The default depends on the code character.
315
316 @item No I/O
317 This code letter computes an argument without reading any input.
318 Therefore, it does not use a prompt string, and any prompt string you
319 supply is ignored.
320
321 Even though the code letter doesn't use a prompt string, you must follow
322 it with a newline if it is not the last code character in the string.
323
324 @item Prompt
325 A prompt immediately follows the code character. The prompt ends either
326 with the end of the string or with a newline.
327
328 @item Special
329 This code character is meaningful only at the beginning of the
330 interactive string, and it does not look for a prompt or a newline.
331 It is a single, isolated character.
332 @end table
333
334 @cindex reading interactive arguments
335 Here are the code character descriptions for use with @code{interactive}:
336
337 @table @samp
338 @item *
339 Signal an error if the current buffer is read-only. Special.
340
341 @item @@
342 Select the window mentioned in the first mouse event in the key
343 sequence that invoked this command. Special.
344
345 @item ^
346 If the command was invoked through shift-translation, set the mark and
347 activate the region temporarily, or extend an already active region,
348 before the command is run. If the command was invoked without
349 shift-translation, and the region is temporarily active, deactivate
350 the region before the command is run. Special.
351
352 @item a
353 A function name (i.e., a symbol satisfying @code{fboundp}). Existing,
354 Completion, Prompt.
355
356 @item b
357 The name of an existing buffer. By default, uses the name of the
358 current buffer (@pxref{Buffers}). Existing, Completion, Default,
359 Prompt.
360
361 @item B
362 A buffer name. The buffer need not exist. By default, uses the name of
363 a recently used buffer other than the current buffer. Completion,
364 Default, Prompt.
365
366 @item c
367 A character. The cursor does not move into the echo area. Prompt.
368
369 @item C
370 A command name (i.e., a symbol satisfying @code{commandp}). Existing,
371 Completion, Prompt.
372
373 @item d
374 @cindex position argument
375 The position of point, as an integer (@pxref{Point}). No I/O.
376
377 @item D
378 A directory name. The default is the current default directory of the
379 current buffer, @code{default-directory} (@pxref{File Name Expansion}).
380 Existing, Completion, Default, Prompt.
381
382 @item e
383 The first or next mouse event in the key sequence that invoked the command.
384 More precisely, @samp{e} gets events that are lists, so you can look at
385 the data in the lists. @xref{Input Events}. No I/O.
386
387 You can use @samp{e} more than once in a single command's interactive
388 specification. If the key sequence that invoked the command has
389 @var{n} events that are lists, the @var{n}th @samp{e} provides the
390 @var{n}th such event. Events that are not lists, such as function keys
391 and @acronym{ASCII} characters, do not count where @samp{e} is concerned.
392
393 @item f
394 A file name of an existing file (@pxref{File Names}). The default
395 directory is @code{default-directory}. Existing, Completion, Default,
396 Prompt.
397
398 @item F
399 A file name. The file need not exist. Completion, Default, Prompt.
400
401 @item G
402 A file name. The file need not exist. If the user enters just a
403 directory name, then the value is just that directory name, with no
404 file name within the directory added. Completion, Default, Prompt.
405
406 @item i
407 An irrelevant argument. This code always supplies @code{nil} as
408 the argument's value. No I/O.
409
410 @item k
411 A key sequence (@pxref{Key Sequences}). This keeps reading events
412 until a command (or undefined command) is found in the current key
413 maps. The key sequence argument is represented as a string or vector.
414 The cursor does not move into the echo area. Prompt.
415
416 If @samp{k} reads a key sequence that ends with a down-event, it also
417 reads and discards the following up-event. You can get access to that
418 up-event with the @samp{U} code character.
419
420 This kind of input is used by commands such as @code{describe-key} and
421 @code{global-set-key}.
422
423 @item K
424 A key sequence, whose definition you intend to change. This works like
425 @samp{k}, except that it suppresses, for the last input event in the key
426 sequence, the conversions that are normally used (when necessary) to
427 convert an undefined key into a defined one.
428
429 @item m
430 @cindex marker argument
431 The position of the mark, as an integer. No I/O.
432
433 @item M
434 Arbitrary text, read in the minibuffer using the current buffer's input
435 method, and returned as a string (@pxref{Input Methods,,, emacs, The GNU
436 Emacs Manual}). Prompt.
437
438 @item n
439 A number, read with the minibuffer. If the input is not a number, the
440 user has to try again. @samp{n} never uses the prefix argument.
441 Prompt.
442
443 @item N
444 The numeric prefix argument; but if there is no prefix argument, read
445 a number as with @kbd{n}. The value is always a number. @xref{Prefix
446 Command Arguments}. Prompt.
447
448 @item p
449 @cindex numeric prefix argument usage
450 The numeric prefix argument. (Note that this @samp{p} is lower case.)
451 No I/O.
452
453 @item P
454 @cindex raw prefix argument usage
455 The raw prefix argument. (Note that this @samp{P} is upper case.) No
456 I/O.
457
458 @item r
459 @cindex region argument
460 Point and the mark, as two numeric arguments, smallest first. This is
461 the only code letter that specifies two successive arguments rather than
462 one. No I/O.
463
464 @item s
465 Arbitrary text, read in the minibuffer and returned as a string
466 (@pxref{Text from Minibuffer}). Terminate the input with either
467 @kbd{C-j} or @key{RET}. (@kbd{C-q} may be used to include either of
468 these characters in the input.) Prompt.
469
470 @item S
471 An interned symbol whose name is read in the minibuffer. Any whitespace
472 character terminates the input. (Use @kbd{C-q} to include whitespace in
473 the string.) Other characters that normally terminate a symbol (e.g.,
474 parentheses and brackets) do not do so here. Prompt.
475
476 @item U
477 A key sequence or @code{nil}. Can be used after a @samp{k} or
478 @samp{K} argument to get the up-event that was discarded (if any)
479 after @samp{k} or @samp{K} read a down-event. If no up-event has been
480 discarded, @samp{U} provides @code{nil} as the argument. No I/O.
481
482 @item v
483 A variable declared to be a user option (i.e., satisfying the
484 predicate @code{user-variable-p}). This reads the variable using
485 @code{read-variable}. @xref{Definition of read-variable}. Existing,
486 Completion, Prompt.
487
488 @item x
489 A Lisp object, specified with its read syntax, terminated with a
490 @kbd{C-j} or @key{RET}. The object is not evaluated. @xref{Object from
491 Minibuffer}. Prompt.
492
493 @item X
494 @cindex evaluated expression argument
495 A Lisp form's value. @samp{X} reads as @samp{x} does, then evaluates
496 the form so that its value becomes the argument for the command.
497 Prompt.
498
499 @item z
500 A coding system name (a symbol). If the user enters null input, the
501 argument value is @code{nil}. @xref{Coding Systems}. Completion,
502 Existing, Prompt.
503
504 @item Z
505 A coding system name (a symbol)---but only if this command has a prefix
506 argument. With no prefix argument, @samp{Z} provides @code{nil} as the
507 argument value. Completion, Existing, Prompt.
508 @end table
509
510 @node Interactive Examples
511 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
512 @subsection Examples of Using @code{interactive}
513 @cindex examples of using @code{interactive}
514 @cindex @code{interactive}, examples of using
515
516 Here are some examples of @code{interactive}:
517
518 @example
519 @group
520 (defun foo1 () ; @r{@code{foo1} takes no arguments,}
521 (interactive) ; @r{just moves forward two words.}
522 (forward-word 2))
523 @result{} foo1
524 @end group
525
526 @group
527 (defun foo2 (n) ; @r{@code{foo2} takes one argument,}
528 (interactive "^p") ; @r{which is the numeric prefix.}
529 ; @r{under @code{shift-select-mode},}
530 ; @r{will activate or extend region.}
531 (forward-word (* 2 n)))
532 @result{} foo2
533 @end group
534
535 @group
536 (defun foo3 (n) ; @r{@code{foo3} takes one argument,}
537 (interactive "nCount:") ; @r{which is read with the Minibuffer.}
538 (forward-word (* 2 n)))
539 @result{} foo3
540 @end group
541
542 @group
543 (defun three-b (b1 b2 b3)
544 "Select three existing buffers.
545 Put them into three windows, selecting the last one."
546 @end group
547 (interactive "bBuffer1:\nbBuffer2:\nbBuffer3:")
548 (delete-other-windows)
549 (split-window (selected-window) 8)
550 (switch-to-buffer b1)
551 (other-window 1)
552 (split-window (selected-window) 8)
553 (switch-to-buffer b2)
554 (other-window 1)
555 (switch-to-buffer b3))
556 @result{} three-b
557 @group
558 (three-b "*scratch*" "declarations.texi" "*mail*")
559 @result{} nil
560 @end group
561 @end example
562
563 @node Interactive Call
564 @section Interactive Call
565 @cindex interactive call
566
567 After the command loop has translated a key sequence into a command,
568 it invokes that command using the function @code{command-execute}. If
569 the command is a function, @code{command-execute} calls
570 @code{call-interactively}, which reads the arguments and calls the
571 command. You can also call these functions yourself.
572
573 @defun commandp object &optional for-call-interactively
574 Returns @code{t} if @var{object} is suitable for calling interactively;
575 that is, if @var{object} is a command. Otherwise, returns @code{nil}.
576
577 Interactively-callable objects include strings and vectors (which are
578 treated as keyboard macros), lambda expressions that contain a
579 top-level @code{interactive} form (@pxref{Using Interactive}),
580 byte-code function objects made from such lambda expressions, autoload
581 objects that are declared as interactive (non-@code{nil} fourth
582 argument to @code{autoload}), and some primitive functions.
583
584 A symbol satisfies @code{commandp} if it has a non-@code{nil}
585 @code{interactive-form} property, or if its function definition
586 satisfies @code{commandp}. Keys and keymaps are not commands.
587 Rather, they are used to look up commands (@pxref{Keymaps}).
588
589 If @var{for-call-interactively} is non-@code{nil}, then
590 @code{commandp} returns @code{t} only for objects that
591 @code{call-interactively} could call---thus, not for keyboard macros.
592
593 See @code{documentation} in @ref{Accessing Documentation}, for a
594 realistic example of using @code{commandp}.
595 @end defun
596
597 @defun call-interactively command &optional record-flag keys
598 This function calls the interactively callable function @var{command},
599 reading arguments according to its interactive calling specifications.
600 It returns whatever @var{command} returns. An error is signaled if
601 @var{command} is not a function or if it cannot be called
602 interactively (i.e., is not a command). Note that keyboard macros
603 (strings and vectors) are not accepted, even though they are
604 considered commands, because they are not functions. If @var{command}
605 is a symbol, then @code{call-interactively} uses its function definition.
606
607 @cindex record command history
608 If @var{record-flag} is non-@code{nil}, then this command and its
609 arguments are unconditionally added to the list @code{command-history}.
610 Otherwise, the command is added only if it uses the minibuffer to read
611 an argument. @xref{Command History}.
612
613 The argument @var{keys}, if given, should be a vector which specifies
614 the sequence of events to supply if the command inquires which events
615 were used to invoke it. If @var{keys} is omitted or @code{nil}, the
616 default is the return value of @code{this-command-keys-vector}.
617 @xref{Definition of this-command-keys-vector}.
618 @end defun
619
620 @defun command-execute command &optional record-flag keys special
621 @cindex keyboard macro execution
622 This function executes @var{command}. The argument @var{command} must
623 satisfy the @code{commandp} predicate; i.e., it must be an interactively
624 callable function or a keyboard macro.
625
626 A string or vector as @var{command} is executed with
627 @code{execute-kbd-macro}. A function is passed to
628 @code{call-interactively}, along with the optional @var{record-flag}
629 and @var{keys}.
630
631 A symbol is handled by using its function definition in its place. A
632 symbol with an @code{autoload} definition counts as a command if it was
633 declared to stand for an interactively callable function. Such a
634 definition is handled by loading the specified library and then
635 rechecking the definition of the symbol.
636
637 The argument @var{special}, if given, means to ignore the prefix
638 argument and not clear it. This is used for executing special events
639 (@pxref{Special Events}).
640 @end defun
641
642 @deffn Command execute-extended-command prefix-argument
643 @cindex read command name
644 This function reads a command name from the minibuffer using
645 @code{completing-read} (@pxref{Completion}). Then it uses
646 @code{command-execute} to call the specified command. Whatever that
647 command returns becomes the value of @code{execute-extended-command}.
648
649 @cindex execute with prefix argument
650 If the command asks for a prefix argument, it receives the value
651 @var{prefix-argument}. If @code{execute-extended-command} is called
652 interactively, the current raw prefix argument is used for
653 @var{prefix-argument}, and thus passed on to whatever command is run.
654
655 @c !!! Should this be @kindex?
656 @cindex @kbd{M-x}
657 @code{execute-extended-command} is the normal definition of @kbd{M-x},
658 so it uses the string @w{@samp{M-x }} as a prompt. (It would be better
659 to take the prompt from the events used to invoke
660 @code{execute-extended-command}, but that is painful to implement.) A
661 description of the value of the prefix argument, if any, also becomes
662 part of the prompt.
663
664 @example
665 @group
666 (execute-extended-command 3)
667 ---------- Buffer: Minibuffer ----------
668 3 M-x forward-word RET
669 ---------- Buffer: Minibuffer ----------
670 @result{} t
671 @end group
672 @end example
673 @end deffn
674
675 @node Distinguish Interactive
676 @section Distinguish Interactive Calls
677
678 Sometimes a command should display additional visual feedback (such
679 as an informative message in the echo area) for interactive calls
680 only. There are three ways to do this. The recommended way to test
681 whether the function was called using @code{call-interactively} is to
682 give it an optional argument @code{print-message} and use the
683 @code{interactive} spec to make it non-@code{nil} in interactive
684 calls. Here's an example:
685
686 @example
687 (defun foo (&optional print-message)
688 (interactive "p")
689 (when print-message
690 (message "foo")))
691 @end example
692
693 @noindent
694 We use @code{"p"} because the numeric prefix argument is never
695 @code{nil}. Defined in this way, the function does display the
696 message when called from a keyboard macro.
697
698 The above method with the additional argument is usually best,
699 because it allows callers to say ``treat this call as interactive.''
700 But you can also do the job by testing @code{called-interactively-p}.
701
702 @defun called-interactively-p kind
703 This function returns @code{t} when the calling function was called
704 using @code{call-interactively}.
705
706 The argument @var{kind} should be either the symbol @code{interactive}
707 or the symbol @code{any}. If it is @code{interactive}, then
708 @code{called-interactively-p} returns @code{t} only if the call was
709 made directly by the user---e.g., if the user typed a key sequence
710 bound to the calling function, but @emph{not} if the user ran a
711 keyboard macro that called the function (@pxref{Keyboard Macros}). If
712 @var{kind} is @code{any}, @code{called-interactively-p} returns
713 @code{t} for any kind of interactive call, including keyboard macros.
714
715 If in doubt, use @code{any}; the only known proper use of
716 @code{interactive} is if you need to decide whether to display a
717 helpful message while a function is running.
718
719 A function is never considered to be called interactively if it was
720 called via Lisp evaluation (or with @code{apply} or @code{funcall}).
721 @end defun
722
723 @noindent
724 Here is an example of using @code{called-interactively-p}:
725
726 @example
727 @group
728 (defun foo ()
729 (interactive)
730 (when (called-interactively-p 'any)
731 (message "Interactive!")
732 'foo-called-interactively))
733 @end group
734
735 @group
736 ;; @r{Type @kbd{M-x foo}.}
737 @print{} Interactive!
738 @end group
739
740 @group
741 (foo)
742 @result{} nil
743 @end group
744 @end example
745
746 @noindent
747 Here is another example that contrasts direct and indirect calls to
748 @code{called-interactively-p}.
749
750 @example
751 @group
752 (defun bar ()
753 (interactive)
754 (message "%s" (list (foo) (called-interactively-p 'any))))
755 @end group
756
757 @group
758 ;; @r{Type @kbd{M-x bar}.}
759 @print{} (nil t)
760 @end group
761 @end example
762
763 @node Command Loop Info
764 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
765 @section Information from the Command Loop
766
767 The editor command loop sets several Lisp variables to keep status
768 records for itself and for commands that are run. With the exception of
769 @code{this-command} and @code{last-command} it's generally a bad idea to
770 change any of these variables in a Lisp program.
771
772 @defvar last-command
773 This variable records the name of the previous command executed by the
774 command loop (the one before the current command). Normally the value
775 is a symbol with a function definition, but this is not guaranteed.
776
777 The value is copied from @code{this-command} when a command returns to
778 the command loop, except when the command has specified a prefix
779 argument for the following command.
780
781 This variable is always local to the current terminal and cannot be
782 buffer-local. @xref{Multiple Terminals}.
783 @end defvar
784
785 @defvar real-last-command
786 This variable is set up by Emacs just like @code{last-command},
787 but never altered by Lisp programs.
788 @end defvar
789
790 @defvar last-repeatable-command
791 This variable stores the most recently executed command that was not
792 part of an input event. This is the command @code{repeat} will try to
793 repeat, @xref{Repeating,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}.
794 @end defvar
795
796 @defvar this-command
797 @cindex current command
798 This variable records the name of the command now being executed by
799 the editor command loop. Like @code{last-command}, it is normally a symbol
800 with a function definition.
801
802 The command loop sets this variable just before running a command, and
803 copies its value into @code{last-command} when the command finishes
804 (unless the command specified a prefix argument for the following
805 command).
806
807 @cindex kill command repetition
808 Some commands set this variable during their execution, as a flag for
809 whatever command runs next. In particular, the functions for killing text
810 set @code{this-command} to @code{kill-region} so that any kill commands
811 immediately following will know to append the killed text to the
812 previous kill.
813 @end defvar
814
815 If you do not want a particular command to be recognized as the previous
816 command in the case where it got an error, you must code that command to
817 prevent this. One way is to set @code{this-command} to @code{t} at the
818 beginning of the command, and set @code{this-command} back to its proper
819 value at the end, like this:
820
821 @example
822 (defun foo (args@dots{})
823 (interactive @dots{})
824 (let ((old-this-command this-command))
825 (setq this-command t)
826 @r{@dots{}do the work@dots{}}
827 (setq this-command old-this-command)))
828 @end example
829
830 @noindent
831 We do not bind @code{this-command} with @code{let} because that would
832 restore the old value in case of error---a feature of @code{let} which
833 in this case does precisely what we want to avoid.
834
835 @defvar this-original-command
836 This has the same value as @code{this-command} except when command
837 remapping occurs (@pxref{Remapping Commands}). In that case,
838 @code{this-command} gives the command actually run (the result of
839 remapping), and @code{this-original-command} gives the command that
840 was specified to run but remapped into another command.
841 @end defvar
842
843 @defun this-command-keys
844 This function returns a string or vector containing the key sequence
845 that invoked the present command, plus any previous commands that
846 generated the prefix argument for this command. Any events read by the
847 command using @code{read-event} without a timeout get tacked on to the end.
848
849 However, if the command has called @code{read-key-sequence}, it
850 returns the last read key sequence. @xref{Key Sequence Input}. The
851 value is a string if all events in the sequence were characters that
852 fit in a string. @xref{Input Events}.
853
854 @example
855 @group
856 (this-command-keys)
857 ;; @r{Now use @kbd{C-u C-x C-e} to evaluate that.}
858 @result{} "^U^X^E"
859 @end group
860 @end example
861 @end defun
862
863 @defun this-command-keys-vector
864 @anchor{Definition of this-command-keys-vector}
865 Like @code{this-command-keys}, except that it always returns the events
866 in a vector, so you don't need to deal with the complexities of storing
867 input events in a string (@pxref{Strings of Events}).
868 @end defun
869
870 @defun clear-this-command-keys &optional keep-record
871 This function empties out the table of events for
872 @code{this-command-keys} to return. Unless @var{keep-record} is
873 non-@code{nil}, it also empties the records that the function
874 @code{recent-keys} (@pxref{Recording Input}) will subsequently return.
875 This is useful after reading a password, to prevent the password from
876 echoing inadvertently as part of the next command in certain cases.
877 @end defun
878
879 @defvar last-nonmenu-event
880 This variable holds the last input event read as part of a key sequence,
881 not counting events resulting from mouse menus.
882
883 One use of this variable is for telling @code{x-popup-menu} where to pop
884 up a menu. It is also used internally by @code{y-or-n-p}
885 (@pxref{Yes-or-No Queries}).
886 @end defvar
887
888 @defvar last-command-event
889 @defvarx last-command-char
890 This variable is set to the last input event that was read by the
891 command loop as part of a command. The principal use of this variable
892 is in @code{self-insert-command}, which uses it to decide which
893 character to insert.
894
895 @example
896 @group
897 last-command-event
898 ;; @r{Now use @kbd{C-u C-x C-e} to evaluate that.}
899 @result{} 5
900 @end group
901 @end example
902
903 @noindent
904 The value is 5 because that is the @acronym{ASCII} code for @kbd{C-e}.
905
906 The alias @code{last-command-char} is obsolete.
907 @end defvar
908
909 @c Emacs 19 feature
910 @defvar last-event-frame
911 This variable records which frame the last input event was directed to.
912 Usually this is the frame that was selected when the event was
913 generated, but if that frame has redirected input focus to another
914 frame, the value is the frame to which the event was redirected.
915 @xref{Input Focus}.
916
917 If the last event came from a keyboard macro, the value is @code{macro}.
918 @end defvar
919
920 @node Adjusting Point
921 @section Adjusting Point After Commands
922 @cindex adjusting point
923 @cindex invisible/intangible text, and point
924 @cindex @code{display} property, and point display
925 @cindex @code{composition} property, and point display
926
927 It is not easy to display a value of point in the middle of a
928 sequence of text that has the @code{display}, @code{composition} or
929 @code{intangible} property, or is invisible. Therefore, after a
930 command finishes and returns to the command loop, if point is within
931 such a sequence, the command loop normally moves point to the edge of
932 the sequence.
933
934 A command can inhibit this feature by setting the variable
935 @code{disable-point-adjustment}:
936
937 @defvar disable-point-adjustment
938 If this variable is non-@code{nil} when a command returns to the
939 command loop, then the command loop does not check for those text
940 properties, and does not move point out of sequences that have them.
941
942 The command loop sets this variable to @code{nil} before each command,
943 so if a command sets it, the effect applies only to that command.
944 @end defvar
945
946 @defvar global-disable-point-adjustment
947 If you set this variable to a non-@code{nil} value, the feature of
948 moving point out of these sequences is completely turned off.
949 @end defvar
950
951 @node Input Events
952 @section Input Events
953 @cindex events
954 @cindex input events
955
956 The Emacs command loop reads a sequence of @dfn{input events} that
957 represent keyboard or mouse activity. The events for keyboard activity
958 are characters or symbols; mouse events are always lists. This section
959 describes the representation and meaning of input events in detail.
960
961 @defun eventp object
962 This function returns non-@code{nil} if @var{object} is an input event
963 or event type.
964
965 Note that any symbol might be used as an event or an event type.
966 @code{eventp} cannot distinguish whether a symbol is intended by Lisp
967 code to be used as an event. Instead, it distinguishes whether the
968 symbol has actually been used in an event that has been read as input in
969 the current Emacs session. If a symbol has not yet been so used,
970 @code{eventp} returns @code{nil}.
971 @end defun
972
973 @menu
974 * Keyboard Events:: Ordinary characters--keys with symbols on them.
975 * Function Keys:: Function keys--keys with names, not symbols.
976 * Mouse Events:: Overview of mouse events.
977 * Click Events:: Pushing and releasing a mouse button.
978 * Drag Events:: Moving the mouse before releasing the button.
979 * Button-Down Events:: A button was pushed and not yet released.
980 * Repeat Events:: Double and triple click (or drag, or down).
981 * Motion Events:: Just moving the mouse, not pushing a button.
982 * Focus Events:: Moving the mouse between frames.
983 * Misc Events:: Other events the system can generate.
984 * Event Examples:: Examples of the lists for mouse events.
985 * Classifying Events:: Finding the modifier keys in an event symbol.
986 Event types.
987 * Accessing Mouse:: Functions to extract info from mouse events.
988 * Accessing Scroll:: Functions to get info from scroll bar events.
989 * Strings of Events:: Special considerations for putting
990 keyboard character events in a string.
991 @end menu
992
993 @node Keyboard Events
994 @subsection Keyboard Events
995 @cindex keyboard events
996
997 There are two kinds of input you can get from the keyboard: ordinary
998 keys, and function keys. Ordinary keys correspond to characters; the
999 events they generate are represented in Lisp as characters. The event
1000 type of a character event is the character itself (an integer); see
1001 @ref{Classifying Events}.
1002
1003 @cindex modifier bits (of input character)
1004 @cindex basic code (of input character)
1005 An input character event consists of a @dfn{basic code} between 0 and
1006 524287, plus any or all of these @dfn{modifier bits}:
1007
1008 @table @asis
1009 @item meta
1010 The
1011 @tex
1012 @math{2^{27}}
1013 @end tex
1014 @ifnottex
1015 2**27
1016 @end ifnottex
1017 bit in the character code indicates a character
1018 typed with the meta key held down.
1019
1020 @item control
1021 The
1022 @tex
1023 @math{2^{26}}
1024 @end tex
1025 @ifnottex
1026 2**26
1027 @end ifnottex
1028 bit in the character code indicates a non-@acronym{ASCII}
1029 control character.
1030
1031 @sc{ascii} control characters such as @kbd{C-a} have special basic
1032 codes of their own, so Emacs needs no special bit to indicate them.
1033 Thus, the code for @kbd{C-a} is just 1.
1034
1035 But if you type a control combination not in @acronym{ASCII}, such as
1036 @kbd{%} with the control key, the numeric value you get is the code
1037 for @kbd{%} plus
1038 @tex
1039 @math{2^{26}}
1040 @end tex
1041 @ifnottex
1042 2**26
1043 @end ifnottex
1044 (assuming the terminal supports non-@acronym{ASCII}
1045 control characters).
1046
1047 @item shift
1048 The
1049 @tex
1050 @math{2^{25}}
1051 @end tex
1052 @ifnottex
1053 2**25
1054 @end ifnottex
1055 bit in the character code indicates an @acronym{ASCII} control
1056 character typed with the shift key held down.
1057
1058 For letters, the basic code itself indicates upper versus lower case;
1059 for digits and punctuation, the shift key selects an entirely different
1060 character with a different basic code. In order to keep within the
1061 @acronym{ASCII} character set whenever possible, Emacs avoids using the
1062 @tex
1063 @math{2^{25}}
1064 @end tex
1065 @ifnottex
1066 2**25
1067 @end ifnottex
1068 bit for those characters.
1069
1070 However, @acronym{ASCII} provides no way to distinguish @kbd{C-A} from
1071 @kbd{C-a}, so Emacs uses the
1072 @tex
1073 @math{2^{25}}
1074 @end tex
1075 @ifnottex
1076 2**25
1077 @end ifnottex
1078 bit in @kbd{C-A} and not in
1079 @kbd{C-a}.
1080
1081 @item hyper
1082 The
1083 @tex
1084 @math{2^{24}}
1085 @end tex
1086 @ifnottex
1087 2**24
1088 @end ifnottex
1089 bit in the character code indicates a character
1090 typed with the hyper key held down.
1091
1092 @item super
1093 The
1094 @tex
1095 @math{2^{23}}
1096 @end tex
1097 @ifnottex
1098 2**23
1099 @end ifnottex
1100 bit in the character code indicates a character
1101 typed with the super key held down.
1102
1103 @item alt
1104 The
1105 @tex
1106 @math{2^{22}}
1107 @end tex
1108 @ifnottex
1109 2**22
1110 @end ifnottex
1111 bit in the character code indicates a character typed with
1112 the alt key held down. (On some terminals, the key labeled @key{ALT}
1113 is actually the meta key.)
1114 @end table
1115
1116 It is best to avoid mentioning specific bit numbers in your program.
1117 To test the modifier bits of a character, use the function
1118 @code{event-modifiers} (@pxref{Classifying Events}). When making key
1119 bindings, you can use the read syntax for characters with modifier bits
1120 (@samp{\C-}, @samp{\M-}, and so on). For making key bindings with
1121 @code{define-key}, you can use lists such as @code{(control hyper ?x)} to
1122 specify the characters (@pxref{Changing Key Bindings}). The function
1123 @code{event-convert-list} converts such a list into an event type
1124 (@pxref{Classifying Events}).
1125
1126 @node Function Keys
1127 @subsection Function Keys
1128
1129 @cindex function keys
1130 Most keyboards also have @dfn{function keys}---keys that have names or
1131 symbols that are not characters. Function keys are represented in Emacs
1132 Lisp as symbols; the symbol's name is the function key's label, in lower
1133 case. For example, pressing a key labeled @key{F1} places the symbol
1134 @code{f1} in the input stream.
1135
1136 The event type of a function key event is the event symbol itself.
1137 @xref{Classifying Events}.
1138
1139 Here are a few special cases in the symbol-naming convention for
1140 function keys:
1141
1142 @table @asis
1143 @item @code{backspace}, @code{tab}, @code{newline}, @code{return}, @code{delete}
1144 These keys correspond to common @acronym{ASCII} control characters that have
1145 special keys on most keyboards.
1146
1147 In @acronym{ASCII}, @kbd{C-i} and @key{TAB} are the same character. If the
1148 terminal can distinguish between them, Emacs conveys the distinction to
1149 Lisp programs by representing the former as the integer 9, and the
1150 latter as the symbol @code{tab}.
1151
1152 Most of the time, it's not useful to distinguish the two. So normally
1153 @code{local-function-key-map} (@pxref{Translation Keymaps}) is set up
1154 to map @code{tab} into 9. Thus, a key binding for character code 9
1155 (the character @kbd{C-i}) also applies to @code{tab}. Likewise for
1156 the other symbols in this group. The function @code{read-char}
1157 likewise converts these events into characters.
1158
1159 In @acronym{ASCII}, @key{BS} is really @kbd{C-h}. But @code{backspace}
1160 converts into the character code 127 (@key{DEL}), not into code 8
1161 (@key{BS}). This is what most users prefer.
1162
1163 @item @code{left}, @code{up}, @code{right}, @code{down}
1164 Cursor arrow keys
1165 @item @code{kp-add}, @code{kp-decimal}, @code{kp-divide}, @dots{}
1166 Keypad keys (to the right of the regular keyboard).
1167 @item @code{kp-0}, @code{kp-1}, @dots{}
1168 Keypad keys with digits.
1169 @item @code{kp-f1}, @code{kp-f2}, @code{kp-f3}, @code{kp-f4}
1170 Keypad PF keys.
1171 @item @code{kp-home}, @code{kp-left}, @code{kp-up}, @code{kp-right}, @code{kp-down}
1172 Keypad arrow keys. Emacs normally translates these into the
1173 corresponding non-keypad keys @code{home}, @code{left}, @dots{}
1174 @item @code{kp-prior}, @code{kp-next}, @code{kp-end}, @code{kp-begin}, @code{kp-insert}, @code{kp-delete}
1175 Additional keypad duplicates of keys ordinarily found elsewhere. Emacs
1176 normally translates these into the like-named non-keypad keys.
1177 @end table
1178
1179 You can use the modifier keys @key{ALT}, @key{CTRL}, @key{HYPER},
1180 @key{META}, @key{SHIFT}, and @key{SUPER} with function keys. The way to
1181 represent them is with prefixes in the symbol name:
1182
1183 @table @samp
1184 @item A-
1185 The alt modifier.
1186 @item C-
1187 The control modifier.
1188 @item H-
1189 The hyper modifier.
1190 @item M-
1191 The meta modifier.
1192 @item S-
1193 The shift modifier.
1194 @item s-
1195 The super modifier.
1196 @end table
1197
1198 Thus, the symbol for the key @key{F3} with @key{META} held down is
1199 @code{M-f3}. When you use more than one prefix, we recommend you
1200 write them in alphabetical order; but the order does not matter in
1201 arguments to the key-binding lookup and modification functions.
1202
1203 @node Mouse Events
1204 @subsection Mouse Events
1205
1206 Emacs supports four kinds of mouse events: click events, drag events,
1207 button-down events, and motion events. All mouse events are represented
1208 as lists. The @sc{car} of the list is the event type; this says which
1209 mouse button was involved, and which modifier keys were used with it.
1210 The event type can also distinguish double or triple button presses
1211 (@pxref{Repeat Events}). The rest of the list elements give position
1212 and time information.
1213
1214 For key lookup, only the event type matters: two events of the same type
1215 necessarily run the same command. The command can access the full
1216 values of these events using the @samp{e} interactive code.
1217 @xref{Interactive Codes}.
1218
1219 A key sequence that starts with a mouse event is read using the keymaps
1220 of the buffer in the window that the mouse was in, not the current
1221 buffer. This does not imply that clicking in a window selects that
1222 window or its buffer---that is entirely under the control of the command
1223 binding of the key sequence.
1224
1225 @node Click Events
1226 @subsection Click Events
1227 @cindex click event
1228 @cindex mouse click event
1229
1230 When the user presses a mouse button and releases it at the same
1231 location, that generates a @dfn{click} event. All mouse click event
1232 share the same format:
1233
1234 @example
1235 (@var{event-type} @var{position} @var{click-count})
1236 @end example
1237
1238 @table @asis
1239 @item @var{event-type}
1240 This is a symbol that indicates which mouse button was used. It is
1241 one of the symbols @code{mouse-1}, @code{mouse-2}, @dots{}, where the
1242 buttons are numbered left to right.
1243
1244 You can also use prefixes @samp{A-}, @samp{C-}, @samp{H-}, @samp{M-},
1245 @samp{S-} and @samp{s-} for modifiers alt, control, hyper, meta, shift
1246 and super, just as you would with function keys.
1247
1248 This symbol also serves as the event type of the event. Key bindings
1249 describe events by their types; thus, if there is a key binding for
1250 @code{mouse-1}, that binding would apply to all events whose
1251 @var{event-type} is @code{mouse-1}.
1252
1253 @item @var{position}
1254 This is the position where the mouse click occurred. The actual
1255 format of @var{position} depends on what part of a window was clicked
1256 on.
1257
1258 For mouse click events in the text area, mode line, header line, or in
1259 the marginal areas, @var{position} has this form:
1260
1261 @example
1262 (@var{window} @var{pos-or-area} (@var{x} . @var{y}) @var{timestamp}
1263 @var{object} @var{text-pos} (@var{col} . @var{row})
1264 @var{image} (@var{dx} . @var{dy}) (@var{width} . @var{height}))
1265 @end example
1266
1267 @table @asis
1268 @item @var{window}
1269 This is the window in which the click occurred.
1270
1271 @item @var{pos-or-area}
1272 This is the buffer position of the character clicked on in the text
1273 area, or if clicked outside the text area, it is the window area in
1274 which the click occurred. It is one of the symbols @code{mode-line},
1275 @code{header-line}, @code{vertical-line}, @code{left-margin},
1276 @code{right-margin}, @code{left-fringe}, or @code{right-fringe}.
1277
1278 In one special case, @var{pos-or-area} is a list containing a symbol (one
1279 of the symbols listed above) instead of just the symbol. This happens
1280 after the imaginary prefix keys for the event are inserted into the
1281 input stream. @xref{Key Sequence Input}.
1282
1283
1284 @item @var{x}, @var{y}
1285 These are the pixel coordinates of the click, relative to
1286 the top left corner of @var{window}, which is @code{(0 . 0)}.
1287 For a click on text, these are relative to the top left corner of
1288 the window's text area. For the mode or header line, they are
1289 relative to the top left window edge. For fringes, margins, and the
1290 vertical border, @var{x} does not have meaningful data. For fringes
1291 and margins, @var{y} is relative to the bottom edge of the header
1292 line.
1293
1294 @item @var{timestamp}
1295 This is the time at which the event occurred, in milliseconds.
1296
1297 @item @var{object}
1298 This is the object on which the click occurred. It is either
1299 @code{nil} if there is no string property, or it has the form
1300 (@var{string} . @var{string-pos}) when there is a string-type text
1301 property at the click position.
1302
1303 @table @asis
1304 @item @var{string}
1305 This is the string on which the click occurred, including any
1306 properties.
1307
1308 @item @var{string-pos}
1309 This is the position in the string on which the click occurred,
1310 relevant if properties at the click need to be looked up.
1311 @end table
1312
1313 @item @var{text-pos}
1314 For clicks on a marginal area or on a fringe, this is the buffer
1315 position of the first visible character in the corresponding line in
1316 the window. For other events, it is the current buffer position in
1317 the window.
1318
1319 @item @var{col}, @var{row}
1320 These are the actual coordinates of the glyph under the @var{x},
1321 @var{y} position, possibly padded with default character width
1322 glyphs if @var{x} is beyond the last glyph on the line. For clicks on
1323 the header or mode line, these are measured from the top left edge of
1324 the header or mode line. For clicks on the fringes and on the
1325 vertical border, these have no meaningful data. For clicks on the
1326 margins, @var{col} is measured from the left edge of the margin area
1327 and @var{row} is measured from the top of the margin area.
1328
1329 @item @var{image}
1330 This is the image object on which the click occurred. It is either
1331 @code{nil} if there is no image at the position clicked on, or it is
1332 an image object as returned by @code{find-image} if click was in an image.
1333
1334 @item @var{dx}, @var{dy}
1335 These are the pixel coordinates of the click, relative to
1336 the top left corner of @var{object}, which is @code{(0 . 0)}. If
1337 @var{object} is @code{nil}, the coordinates are relative to the top
1338 left corner of the character glyph clicked on.
1339
1340 @item @var{width}, @var{height}
1341 These are the pixel width and height of @var{object} or, if this is
1342 @code{nil}, those of the character glyph clicked on.
1343 @end table
1344
1345 @sp 1
1346 For mouse clicks on a scroll-bar, @var{position} has this form:
1347
1348 @example
1349 (@var{window} @var{area} (@var{portion} . @var{whole}) @var{timestamp} @var{part})
1350 @end example
1351
1352 @table @asis
1353 @item @var{window}
1354 This is the window whose scroll-bar was clicked on.
1355
1356 @item @var{area}
1357 This is the scroll bar where the click occurred. It is one of the
1358 symbols @code{vertical-scroll-bar} or @code{horizontal-scroll-bar}.
1359
1360 @item @var{portion}
1361 This is the distance of the click from the top or left end of
1362 the scroll bar.
1363
1364 @item @var{whole}
1365 This is the length of the entire scroll bar.
1366
1367 @item @var{timestamp}
1368 This is the time at which the event occurred, in milliseconds.
1369
1370 @item @var{part}
1371 This is the part of the scroll-bar which was clicked on. It is one
1372 of the symbols @code{above-handle}, @code{handle}, @code{below-handle},
1373 @code{up}, @code{down}, @code{top}, @code{bottom}, and @code{end-scroll}.
1374 @end table
1375
1376 @item @var{click-count}
1377 This is the number of rapid repeated presses so far of the same mouse
1378 button. @xref{Repeat Events}.
1379 @end table
1380
1381 @node Drag Events
1382 @subsection Drag Events
1383 @cindex drag event
1384 @cindex mouse drag event
1385
1386 With Emacs, you can have a drag event without even changing your
1387 clothes. A @dfn{drag event} happens every time the user presses a mouse
1388 button and then moves the mouse to a different character position before
1389 releasing the button. Like all mouse events, drag events are
1390 represented in Lisp as lists. The lists record both the starting mouse
1391 position and the final position, like this:
1392
1393 @example
1394 (@var{event-type}
1395 (@var{window1} START-POSITION)
1396 (@var{window2} END-POSITION))
1397 @end example
1398
1399 For a drag event, the name of the symbol @var{event-type} contains the
1400 prefix @samp{drag-}. For example, dragging the mouse with button 2
1401 held down generates a @code{drag-mouse-2} event. The second and third
1402 elements of the event give the starting and ending position of the
1403 drag. They have the same form as @var{position} in a click event
1404 (@pxref{Click Events}) that is not on the scroll bar part of the
1405 window. You can access the second element of any mouse event in the
1406 same way, with no need to distinguish drag events from others.
1407
1408 The @samp{drag-} prefix follows the modifier key prefixes such as
1409 @samp{C-} and @samp{M-}.
1410
1411 If @code{read-key-sequence} receives a drag event that has no key
1412 binding, and the corresponding click event does have a binding, it
1413 changes the drag event into a click event at the drag's starting
1414 position. This means that you don't have to distinguish between click
1415 and drag events unless you want to.
1416
1417 @node Button-Down Events
1418 @subsection Button-Down Events
1419 @cindex button-down event
1420
1421 Click and drag events happen when the user releases a mouse button.
1422 They cannot happen earlier, because there is no way to distinguish a
1423 click from a drag until the button is released.
1424
1425 If you want to take action as soon as a button is pressed, you need to
1426 handle @dfn{button-down} events.@footnote{Button-down is the
1427 conservative antithesis of drag.} These occur as soon as a button is
1428 pressed. They are represented by lists that look exactly like click
1429 events (@pxref{Click Events}), except that the @var{event-type} symbol
1430 name contains the prefix @samp{down-}. The @samp{down-} prefix follows
1431 modifier key prefixes such as @samp{C-} and @samp{M-}.
1432
1433 The function @code{read-key-sequence} ignores any button-down events
1434 that don't have command bindings; therefore, the Emacs command loop
1435 ignores them too. This means that you need not worry about defining
1436 button-down events unless you want them to do something. The usual
1437 reason to define a button-down event is so that you can track mouse
1438 motion (by reading motion events) until the button is released.
1439 @xref{Motion Events}.
1440
1441 @node Repeat Events
1442 @subsection Repeat Events
1443 @cindex repeat events
1444 @cindex double-click events
1445 @cindex triple-click events
1446 @cindex mouse events, repeated
1447
1448 If you press the same mouse button more than once in quick succession
1449 without moving the mouse, Emacs generates special @dfn{repeat} mouse
1450 events for the second and subsequent presses.
1451
1452 The most common repeat events are @dfn{double-click} events. Emacs
1453 generates a double-click event when you click a button twice; the event
1454 happens when you release the button (as is normal for all click
1455 events).
1456
1457 The event type of a double-click event contains the prefix
1458 @samp{double-}. Thus, a double click on the second mouse button with
1459 @key{meta} held down comes to the Lisp program as
1460 @code{M-double-mouse-2}. If a double-click event has no binding, the
1461 binding of the corresponding ordinary click event is used to execute
1462 it. Thus, you need not pay attention to the double click feature
1463 unless you really want to.
1464
1465 When the user performs a double click, Emacs generates first an ordinary
1466 click event, and then a double-click event. Therefore, you must design
1467 the command binding of the double click event to assume that the
1468 single-click command has already run. It must produce the desired
1469 results of a double click, starting from the results of a single click.
1470
1471 This is convenient, if the meaning of a double click somehow ``builds
1472 on'' the meaning of a single click---which is recommended user interface
1473 design practice for double clicks.
1474
1475 If you click a button, then press it down again and start moving the
1476 mouse with the button held down, then you get a @dfn{double-drag} event
1477 when you ultimately release the button. Its event type contains
1478 @samp{double-drag} instead of just @samp{drag}. If a double-drag event
1479 has no binding, Emacs looks for an alternate binding as if the event
1480 were an ordinary drag.
1481
1482 Before the double-click or double-drag event, Emacs generates a
1483 @dfn{double-down} event when the user presses the button down for the
1484 second time. Its event type contains @samp{double-down} instead of just
1485 @samp{down}. If a double-down event has no binding, Emacs looks for an
1486 alternate binding as if the event were an ordinary button-down event.
1487 If it finds no binding that way either, the double-down event is
1488 ignored.
1489
1490 To summarize, when you click a button and then press it again right
1491 away, Emacs generates a down event and a click event for the first
1492 click, a double-down event when you press the button again, and finally
1493 either a double-click or a double-drag event.
1494
1495 If you click a button twice and then press it again, all in quick
1496 succession, Emacs generates a @dfn{triple-down} event, followed by
1497 either a @dfn{triple-click} or a @dfn{triple-drag}. The event types of
1498 these events contain @samp{triple} instead of @samp{double}. If any
1499 triple event has no binding, Emacs uses the binding that it would use
1500 for the corresponding double event.
1501
1502 If you click a button three or more times and then press it again, the
1503 events for the presses beyond the third are all triple events. Emacs
1504 does not have separate event types for quadruple, quintuple, etc.@:
1505 events. However, you can look at the event list to find out precisely
1506 how many times the button was pressed.
1507
1508 @defun event-click-count event
1509 This function returns the number of consecutive button presses that led
1510 up to @var{event}. If @var{event} is a double-down, double-click or
1511 double-drag event, the value is 2. If @var{event} is a triple event,
1512 the value is 3 or greater. If @var{event} is an ordinary mouse event
1513 (not a repeat event), the value is 1.
1514 @end defun
1515
1516 @defopt double-click-fuzz
1517 To generate repeat events, successive mouse button presses must be at
1518 approximately the same screen position. The value of
1519 @code{double-click-fuzz} specifies the maximum number of pixels the
1520 mouse may be moved (horizontally or vertically) between two successive
1521 clicks to make a double-click.
1522
1523 This variable is also the threshold for motion of the mouse to count
1524 as a drag.
1525 @end defopt
1526
1527 @defopt double-click-time
1528 To generate repeat events, the number of milliseconds between
1529 successive button presses must be less than the value of
1530 @code{double-click-time}. Setting @code{double-click-time} to
1531 @code{nil} disables multi-click detection entirely. Setting it to
1532 @code{t} removes the time limit; Emacs then detects multi-clicks by
1533 position only.
1534 @end defopt
1535
1536 @node Motion Events
1537 @subsection Motion Events
1538 @cindex motion event
1539 @cindex mouse motion events
1540
1541 Emacs sometimes generates @dfn{mouse motion} events to describe motion
1542 of the mouse without any button activity. Mouse motion events are
1543 represented by lists that look like this:
1544
1545 @example
1546 (mouse-movement POSITION)
1547 @end example
1548
1549 The second element of the list describes the current position of the
1550 mouse, just as in a click event (@pxref{Click Events}).
1551
1552 The special form @code{track-mouse} enables generation of motion events
1553 within its body. Outside of @code{track-mouse} forms, Emacs does not
1554 generate events for mere motion of the mouse, and these events do not
1555 appear. @xref{Mouse Tracking}.
1556
1557 @node Focus Events
1558 @subsection Focus Events
1559 @cindex focus event
1560
1561 Window systems provide general ways for the user to control which window
1562 gets keyboard input. This choice of window is called the @dfn{focus}.
1563 When the user does something to switch between Emacs frames, that
1564 generates a @dfn{focus event}. The normal definition of a focus event,
1565 in the global keymap, is to select a new frame within Emacs, as the user
1566 would expect. @xref{Input Focus}.
1567
1568 Focus events are represented in Lisp as lists that look like this:
1569
1570 @example
1571 (switch-frame @var{new-frame})
1572 @end example
1573
1574 @noindent
1575 where @var{new-frame} is the frame switched to.
1576
1577 Some X window managers are set up so that just moving the mouse into a
1578 window is enough to set the focus there. Usually, there is no need
1579 for a Lisp program to know about the focus change until some other
1580 kind of input arrives. Emacs generates a focus event only when the
1581 user actually types a keyboard key or presses a mouse button in the
1582 new frame; just moving the mouse between frames does not generate a
1583 focus event.
1584
1585 A focus event in the middle of a key sequence would garble the
1586 sequence. So Emacs never generates a focus event in the middle of a key
1587 sequence. If the user changes focus in the middle of a key
1588 sequence---that is, after a prefix key---then Emacs reorders the events
1589 so that the focus event comes either before or after the multi-event key
1590 sequence, and not within it.
1591
1592 @node Misc Events
1593 @subsection Miscellaneous System Events
1594
1595 A few other event types represent occurrences within the system.
1596
1597 @table @code
1598 @cindex @code{delete-frame} event
1599 @item (delete-frame (@var{frame}))
1600 This kind of event indicates that the user gave the window manager
1601 a command to delete a particular window, which happens to be an Emacs frame.
1602
1603 The standard definition of the @code{delete-frame} event is to delete @var{frame}.
1604
1605 @cindex @code{iconify-frame} event
1606 @item (iconify-frame (@var{frame}))
1607 This kind of event indicates that the user iconified @var{frame} using
1608 the window manager. Its standard definition is @code{ignore}; since the
1609 frame has already been iconified, Emacs has no work to do. The purpose
1610 of this event type is so that you can keep track of such events if you
1611 want to.
1612
1613 @cindex @code{make-frame-visible} event
1614 @item (make-frame-visible (@var{frame}))
1615 This kind of event indicates that the user deiconified @var{frame} using
1616 the window manager. Its standard definition is @code{ignore}; since the
1617 frame has already been made visible, Emacs has no work to do.
1618
1619 @cindex @code{wheel-up} event
1620 @cindex @code{wheel-down} event
1621 @item (wheel-up @var{position})
1622 @item (wheel-down @var{position})
1623 These kinds of event are generated by moving a mouse wheel. Their
1624 usual meaning is a kind of scroll or zoom.
1625
1626 The element @var{position} is a list describing the position of the
1627 event, in the same format as used in a mouse-click event (@pxref{Click
1628 Events}).
1629
1630 @vindex mouse-wheel-up-event
1631 @vindex mouse-wheel-down-event
1632 This kind of event is generated only on some kinds of systems. On some
1633 systems, @code{mouse-4} and @code{mouse-5} are used instead. For
1634 portable code, use the variables @code{mouse-wheel-up-event} and
1635 @code{mouse-wheel-down-event} defined in @file{mwheel.el} to determine
1636 what event types to expect for the mouse wheel.
1637
1638 @cindex @code{drag-n-drop} event
1639 @item (drag-n-drop @var{position} @var{files})
1640 This kind of event is generated when a group of files is
1641 selected in an application outside of Emacs, and then dragged and
1642 dropped onto an Emacs frame.
1643
1644 The element @var{position} is a list describing the position of the
1645 event, in the same format as used in a mouse-click event (@pxref{Click
1646 Events}), and @var{files} is the list of file names that were dragged
1647 and dropped. The usual way to handle this event is by visiting these
1648 files.
1649
1650 This kind of event is generated, at present, only on some kinds of
1651 systems.
1652
1653 @cindex @code{help-echo} event
1654 @item help-echo
1655 This kind of event is generated when a mouse pointer moves onto a
1656 portion of buffer text which has a @code{help-echo} text property.
1657 The generated event has this form:
1658
1659 @example
1660 (help-echo @var{frame} @var{help} @var{window} @var{object} @var{pos})
1661 @end example
1662
1663 @noindent
1664 The precise meaning of the event parameters and the way these
1665 parameters are used to display the help-echo text are described in
1666 @ref{Text help-echo}.
1667
1668 @cindex @code{sigusr1} event
1669 @cindex @code{sigusr2} event
1670 @cindex user signals
1671 @item sigusr1
1672 @itemx sigusr2
1673 These events are generated when the Emacs process receives
1674 the signals @code{SIGUSR1} and @code{SIGUSR2}. They contain no
1675 additional data because signals do not carry additional information.
1676
1677 To catch a user signal, bind the corresponding event to an interactive
1678 command in the @code{special-event-map} (@pxref{Active Keymaps}).
1679 The command is called with no arguments, and the specific signal event is
1680 available in @code{last-input-event}. For example:
1681
1682 @smallexample
1683 (defun sigusr-handler ()
1684 (interactive)
1685 (message "Caught signal %S" last-input-event))
1686
1687 (define-key special-event-map [sigusr1] 'sigusr-handler)
1688 @end smallexample
1689
1690 To test the signal handler, you can make Emacs send a signal to itself:
1691
1692 @smallexample
1693 (signal-process (emacs-pid) 'sigusr1)
1694 @end smallexample
1695 @end table
1696
1697 If one of these events arrives in the middle of a key sequence---that
1698 is, after a prefix key---then Emacs reorders the events so that this
1699 event comes either before or after the multi-event key sequence, not
1700 within it.
1701
1702 @node Event Examples
1703 @subsection Event Examples
1704
1705 If the user presses and releases the left mouse button over the same
1706 location, that generates a sequence of events like this:
1707
1708 @smallexample
1709 (down-mouse-1 (#<window 18 on NEWS> 2613 (0 . 38) -864320))
1710 (mouse-1 (#<window 18 on NEWS> 2613 (0 . 38) -864180))
1711 @end smallexample
1712
1713 While holding the control key down, the user might hold down the
1714 second mouse button, and drag the mouse from one line to the next.
1715 That produces two events, as shown here:
1716
1717 @smallexample
1718 (C-down-mouse-2 (#<window 18 on NEWS> 3440 (0 . 27) -731219))
1719 (C-drag-mouse-2 (#<window 18 on NEWS> 3440 (0 . 27) -731219)
1720 (#<window 18 on NEWS> 3510 (0 . 28) -729648))
1721 @end smallexample
1722
1723 While holding down the meta and shift keys, the user might press the
1724 second mouse button on the window's mode line, and then drag the mouse
1725 into another window. That produces a pair of events like these:
1726
1727 @smallexample
1728 (M-S-down-mouse-2 (#<window 18 on NEWS> mode-line (33 . 31) -457844))
1729 (M-S-drag-mouse-2 (#<window 18 on NEWS> mode-line (33 . 31) -457844)
1730 (#<window 20 on carlton-sanskrit.tex> 161 (33 . 3)
1731 -453816))
1732 @end smallexample
1733
1734 To handle a SIGUSR1 signal, define an interactive function, and
1735 bind it to the @code{signal usr1} event sequence:
1736
1737 @smallexample
1738 (defun usr1-handler ()
1739 (interactive)
1740 (message "Got USR1 signal"))
1741 (global-set-key [signal usr1] 'usr1-handler)
1742 @end smallexample
1743
1744 @node Classifying Events
1745 @subsection Classifying Events
1746 @cindex event type
1747
1748 Every event has an @dfn{event type}, which classifies the event for
1749 key binding purposes. For a keyboard event, the event type equals the
1750 event value; thus, the event type for a character is the character, and
1751 the event type for a function key symbol is the symbol itself. For
1752 events that are lists, the event type is the symbol in the @sc{car} of
1753 the list. Thus, the event type is always a symbol or a character.
1754
1755 Two events of the same type are equivalent where key bindings are
1756 concerned; thus, they always run the same command. That does not
1757 necessarily mean they do the same things, however, as some commands look
1758 at the whole event to decide what to do. For example, some commands use
1759 the location of a mouse event to decide where in the buffer to act.
1760
1761 Sometimes broader classifications of events are useful. For example,
1762 you might want to ask whether an event involved the @key{META} key,
1763 regardless of which other key or mouse button was used.
1764
1765 The functions @code{event-modifiers} and @code{event-basic-type} are
1766 provided to get such information conveniently.
1767
1768 @defun event-modifiers event
1769 This function returns a list of the modifiers that @var{event} has. The
1770 modifiers are symbols; they include @code{shift}, @code{control},
1771 @code{meta}, @code{alt}, @code{hyper} and @code{super}. In addition,
1772 the modifiers list of a mouse event symbol always contains one of
1773 @code{click}, @code{drag}, and @code{down}. For double or triple
1774 events, it also contains @code{double} or @code{triple}.
1775
1776 The argument @var{event} may be an entire event object, or just an
1777 event type. If @var{event} is a symbol that has never been used in an
1778 event that has been read as input in the current Emacs session, then
1779 @code{event-modifiers} can return @code{nil}, even when @var{event}
1780 actually has modifiers.
1781
1782 Here are some examples:
1783
1784 @example
1785 (event-modifiers ?a)
1786 @result{} nil
1787 (event-modifiers ?A)
1788 @result{} (shift)
1789 (event-modifiers ?\C-a)
1790 @result{} (control)
1791 (event-modifiers ?\C-%)
1792 @result{} (control)
1793 (event-modifiers ?\C-\S-a)
1794 @result{} (control shift)
1795 (event-modifiers 'f5)
1796 @result{} nil
1797 (event-modifiers 's-f5)
1798 @result{} (super)
1799 (event-modifiers 'M-S-f5)
1800 @result{} (meta shift)
1801 (event-modifiers 'mouse-1)
1802 @result{} (click)
1803 (event-modifiers 'down-mouse-1)
1804 @result{} (down)
1805 @end example
1806
1807 The modifiers list for a click event explicitly contains @code{click},
1808 but the event symbol name itself does not contain @samp{click}.
1809 @end defun
1810
1811 @defun event-basic-type event
1812 This function returns the key or mouse button that @var{event}
1813 describes, with all modifiers removed. The @var{event} argument is as
1814 in @code{event-modifiers}. For example:
1815
1816 @example
1817 (event-basic-type ?a)
1818 @result{} 97
1819 (event-basic-type ?A)
1820 @result{} 97
1821 (event-basic-type ?\C-a)
1822 @result{} 97
1823 (event-basic-type ?\C-\S-a)
1824 @result{} 97
1825 (event-basic-type 'f5)
1826 @result{} f5
1827 (event-basic-type 's-f5)
1828 @result{} f5
1829 (event-basic-type 'M-S-f5)
1830 @result{} f5
1831 (event-basic-type 'down-mouse-1)
1832 @result{} mouse-1
1833 @end example
1834 @end defun
1835
1836 @defun mouse-movement-p object
1837 This function returns non-@code{nil} if @var{object} is a mouse movement
1838 event.
1839 @end defun
1840
1841 @defun event-convert-list list
1842 This function converts a list of modifier names and a basic event type
1843 to an event type which specifies all of them. The basic event type
1844 must be the last element of the list. For example,
1845
1846 @example
1847 (event-convert-list '(control ?a))
1848 @result{} 1
1849 (event-convert-list '(control meta ?a))
1850 @result{} -134217727
1851 (event-convert-list '(control super f1))
1852 @result{} C-s-f1
1853 @end example
1854 @end defun
1855
1856 @node Accessing Mouse
1857 @subsection Accessing Mouse Events
1858 @cindex mouse events, data in
1859
1860 This section describes convenient functions for accessing the data in
1861 a mouse button or motion event.
1862
1863 These two functions return the starting or ending position of a
1864 mouse-button event, as a list of this form:
1865
1866 @example
1867 (@var{window} @var{pos-or-area} (@var{x} . @var{y}) @var{timestamp}
1868 @var{object} @var{text-pos} (@var{col} . @var{row})
1869 @var{image} (@var{dx} . @var{dy}) (@var{width} . @var{height}))
1870 @end example
1871
1872 @defun event-start event
1873 This returns the starting position of @var{event}.
1874
1875 If @var{event} is a click or button-down event, this returns the
1876 location of the event. If @var{event} is a drag event, this returns the
1877 drag's starting position.
1878 @end defun
1879
1880 @defun event-end event
1881 This returns the ending position of @var{event}.
1882
1883 If @var{event} is a drag event, this returns the position where the user
1884 released the mouse button. If @var{event} is a click or button-down
1885 event, the value is actually the starting position, which is the only
1886 position such events have.
1887 @end defun
1888
1889 @cindex mouse position list, accessing
1890 These functions take a position list as described above, and
1891 return various parts of it.
1892
1893 @defun posn-window position
1894 Return the window that @var{position} is in.
1895 @end defun
1896
1897 @defun posn-area position
1898 Return the window area recorded in @var{position}. It returns @code{nil}
1899 when the event occurred in the text area of the window; otherwise, it
1900 is a symbol identifying the area in which the event occurred.
1901 @end defun
1902
1903 @defun posn-point position
1904 Return the buffer position in @var{position}. When the event occurred
1905 in the text area of the window, in a marginal area, or on a fringe,
1906 this is an integer specifying a buffer position. Otherwise, the value
1907 is undefined.
1908 @end defun
1909
1910 @defun posn-x-y position
1911 Return the pixel-based x and y coordinates in @var{position}, as a
1912 cons cell @code{(@var{x} . @var{y})}. These coordinates are relative
1913 to the window given by @code{posn-window}.
1914
1915 This example shows how to convert these window-relative coordinates
1916 into frame-relative coordinates:
1917
1918 @example
1919 (defun frame-relative-coordinates (position)
1920 "Return frame-relative coordinates from POSITION."
1921 (let* ((x-y (posn-x-y position))
1922 (window (posn-window position))
1923 (edges (window-inside-pixel-edges window)))
1924 (cons (+ (car x-y) (car edges))
1925 (+ (cdr x-y) (cadr edges)))))
1926 @end example
1927 @end defun
1928
1929 @defun posn-col-row position
1930 Return the row and column (in units of the frame's default character
1931 height and width) of @var{position}, as a cons cell @code{(@var{col} .
1932 @var{row})}. These are computed from the @var{x} and @var{y} values
1933 actually found in @var{position}.
1934 @end defun
1935
1936 @defun posn-actual-col-row position
1937 Return the actual row and column in @var{position}, as a cons cell
1938 @code{(@var{col} . @var{row})}. The values are the actual row number
1939 in the window, and the actual character number in that row. It returns
1940 @code{nil} if @var{position} does not include actual positions values.
1941 You can use @code{posn-col-row} to get approximate values.
1942 @end defun
1943
1944 @defun posn-string position
1945 Return the string object in @var{position}, either @code{nil}, or a
1946 cons cell @code{(@var{string} . @var{string-pos})}.
1947 @end defun
1948
1949 @defun posn-image position
1950 Return the image object in @var{position}, either @code{nil}, or an
1951 image @code{(image ...)}.
1952 @end defun
1953
1954 @defun posn-object position
1955 Return the image or string object in @var{position}, either
1956 @code{nil}, an image @code{(image ...)}, or a cons cell
1957 @code{(@var{string} . @var{string-pos})}.
1958 @end defun
1959
1960 @defun posn-object-x-y position
1961 Return the pixel-based x and y coordinates relative to the upper left
1962 corner of the object in @var{position} as a cons cell @code{(@var{dx}
1963 . @var{dy})}. If the @var{position} is a buffer position, return the
1964 relative position in the character at that position.
1965 @end defun
1966
1967 @defun posn-object-width-height position
1968 Return the pixel width and height of the object in @var{position} as a
1969 cons cell @code{(@var{width} . @var{height})}. If the @var{position}
1970 is a buffer position, return the size of the character at that position.
1971 @end defun
1972
1973 @cindex timestamp of a mouse event
1974 @defun posn-timestamp position
1975 Return the timestamp in @var{position}. This is the time at which the
1976 event occurred, in milliseconds.
1977 @end defun
1978
1979 These functions compute a position list given particular buffer
1980 position or screen position. You can access the data in this position
1981 list with the functions described above.
1982
1983 @defun posn-at-point &optional pos window
1984 This function returns a position list for position @var{pos} in
1985 @var{window}. @var{pos} defaults to point in @var{window};
1986 @var{window} defaults to the selected window.
1987
1988 @code{posn-at-point} returns @code{nil} if @var{pos} is not visible in
1989 @var{window}.
1990 @end defun
1991
1992 @defun posn-at-x-y x y &optional frame-or-window whole
1993 This function returns position information corresponding to pixel
1994 coordinates @var{x} and @var{y} in a specified frame or window,
1995 @var{frame-or-window}, which defaults to the selected window.
1996 The coordinates @var{x} and @var{y} are relative to the
1997 frame or window used.
1998 If @var{whole} is @code{nil}, the coordinates are relative
1999 to the window text area, otherwise they are relative to
2000 the entire window area including scroll bars, margins and fringes.
2001 @end defun
2002
2003 @node Accessing Scroll
2004 @subsection Accessing Scroll Bar Events
2005 @cindex scroll bar events, data in
2006
2007 These functions are useful for decoding scroll bar events.
2008
2009 @defun scroll-bar-event-ratio event
2010 This function returns the fractional vertical position of a scroll bar
2011 event within the scroll bar. The value is a cons cell
2012 @code{(@var{portion} . @var{whole})} containing two integers whose ratio
2013 is the fractional position.
2014 @end defun
2015
2016 @defun scroll-bar-scale ratio total
2017 This function multiplies (in effect) @var{ratio} by @var{total},
2018 rounding the result to an integer. The argument @var{ratio} is not a
2019 number, but rather a pair @code{(@var{num} . @var{denom})}---typically a
2020 value returned by @code{scroll-bar-event-ratio}.
2021
2022 This function is handy for scaling a position on a scroll bar into a
2023 buffer position. Here's how to do that:
2024
2025 @example
2026 (+ (point-min)
2027 (scroll-bar-scale
2028 (posn-x-y (event-start event))
2029 (- (point-max) (point-min))))
2030 @end example
2031
2032 Recall that scroll bar events have two integers forming a ratio, in place
2033 of a pair of x and y coordinates.
2034 @end defun
2035
2036 @node Strings of Events
2037 @subsection Putting Keyboard Events in Strings
2038 @cindex keyboard events in strings
2039 @cindex strings with keyboard events
2040
2041 In most of the places where strings are used, we conceptualize the
2042 string as containing text characters---the same kind of characters found
2043 in buffers or files. Occasionally Lisp programs use strings that
2044 conceptually contain keyboard characters; for example, they may be key
2045 sequences or keyboard macro definitions. However, storing keyboard
2046 characters in a string is a complex matter, for reasons of historical
2047 compatibility, and it is not always possible.
2048
2049 We recommend that new programs avoid dealing with these complexities
2050 by not storing keyboard events in strings. Here is how to do that:
2051
2052 @itemize @bullet
2053 @item
2054 Use vectors instead of strings for key sequences, when you plan to use
2055 them for anything other than as arguments to @code{lookup-key} and
2056 @code{define-key}. For example, you can use
2057 @code{read-key-sequence-vector} instead of @code{read-key-sequence}, and
2058 @code{this-command-keys-vector} instead of @code{this-command-keys}.
2059
2060 @item
2061 Use vectors to write key sequence constants containing meta characters,
2062 even when passing them directly to @code{define-key}.
2063
2064 @item
2065 When you have to look at the contents of a key sequence that might be a
2066 string, use @code{listify-key-sequence} (@pxref{Event Input Misc})
2067 first, to convert it to a list.
2068 @end itemize
2069
2070 The complexities stem from the modifier bits that keyboard input
2071 characters can include. Aside from the Meta modifier, none of these
2072 modifier bits can be included in a string, and the Meta modifier is
2073 allowed only in special cases.
2074
2075 The earliest GNU Emacs versions represented meta characters as codes
2076 in the range of 128 to 255. At that time, the basic character codes
2077 ranged from 0 to 127, so all keyboard character codes did fit in a
2078 string. Many Lisp programs used @samp{\M-} in string constants to stand
2079 for meta characters, especially in arguments to @code{define-key} and
2080 similar functions, and key sequences and sequences of events were always
2081 represented as strings.
2082
2083 When we added support for larger basic character codes beyond 127, and
2084 additional modifier bits, we had to change the representation of meta
2085 characters. Now the flag that represents the Meta modifier in a
2086 character is
2087 @tex
2088 @math{2^{27}}
2089 @end tex
2090 @ifnottex
2091 2**27
2092 @end ifnottex
2093 and such numbers cannot be included in a string.
2094
2095 To support programs with @samp{\M-} in string constants, there are
2096 special rules for including certain meta characters in a string.
2097 Here are the rules for interpreting a string as a sequence of input
2098 characters:
2099
2100 @itemize @bullet
2101 @item
2102 If the keyboard character value is in the range of 0 to 127, it can go
2103 in the string unchanged.
2104
2105 @item
2106 The meta variants of those characters, with codes in the range of
2107 @tex
2108 @math{2^{27}}
2109 @end tex
2110 @ifnottex
2111 2**27
2112 @end ifnottex
2113 to
2114 @tex
2115 @math{2^{27} + 127},
2116 @end tex
2117 @ifnottex
2118 2**27+127,
2119 @end ifnottex
2120 can also go in the string, but you must change their
2121 numeric values. You must set the
2122 @tex
2123 @math{2^{7}}
2124 @end tex
2125 @ifnottex
2126 2**7
2127 @end ifnottex
2128 bit instead of the
2129 @tex
2130 @math{2^{27}}
2131 @end tex
2132 @ifnottex
2133 2**27
2134 @end ifnottex
2135 bit, resulting in a value between 128 and 255. Only a unibyte string
2136 can include these codes.
2137
2138 @item
2139 Non-@acronym{ASCII} characters above 256 can be included in a multibyte string.
2140
2141 @item
2142 Other keyboard character events cannot fit in a string. This includes
2143 keyboard events in the range of 128 to 255.
2144 @end itemize
2145
2146 Functions such as @code{read-key-sequence} that construct strings of
2147 keyboard input characters follow these rules: they construct vectors
2148 instead of strings, when the events won't fit in a string.
2149
2150 When you use the read syntax @samp{\M-} in a string, it produces a
2151 code in the range of 128 to 255---the same code that you get if you
2152 modify the corresponding keyboard event to put it in the string. Thus,
2153 meta events in strings work consistently regardless of how they get into
2154 the strings.
2155
2156 However, most programs would do well to avoid these issues by
2157 following the recommendations at the beginning of this section.
2158
2159 @node Reading Input
2160 @section Reading Input
2161 @cindex read input
2162 @cindex keyboard input
2163
2164 The editor command loop reads key sequences using the function
2165 @code{read-key-sequence}, which uses @code{read-event}. These and other
2166 functions for event input are also available for use in Lisp programs.
2167 See also @code{momentary-string-display} in @ref{Temporary Displays},
2168 and @code{sit-for} in @ref{Waiting}. @xref{Terminal Input}, for
2169 functions and variables for controlling terminal input modes and
2170 debugging terminal input.
2171
2172 For higher-level input facilities, see @ref{Minibuffers}.
2173
2174 @menu
2175 * Key Sequence Input:: How to read one key sequence.
2176 * Reading One Event:: How to read just one event.
2177 * Event Mod:: How Emacs modifies events as they are read.
2178 * Invoking the Input Method:: How reading an event uses the input method.
2179 * Quoted Character Input:: Asking the user to specify a character.
2180 * Event Input Misc:: How to reread or throw away input events.
2181 @end menu
2182
2183 @node Key Sequence Input
2184 @subsection Key Sequence Input
2185 @cindex key sequence input
2186
2187 The command loop reads input a key sequence at a time, by calling
2188 @code{read-key-sequence}. Lisp programs can also call this function;
2189 for example, @code{describe-key} uses it to read the key to describe.
2190
2191 @defun read-key-sequence prompt &optional continue-echo dont-downcase-last switch-frame-ok command-loop
2192 This function reads a key sequence and returns it as a string or
2193 vector. It keeps reading events until it has accumulated a complete key
2194 sequence; that is, enough to specify a non-prefix command using the
2195 currently active keymaps. (Remember that a key sequence that starts
2196 with a mouse event is read using the keymaps of the buffer in the
2197 window that the mouse was in, not the current buffer.)
2198
2199 If the events are all characters and all can fit in a string, then
2200 @code{read-key-sequence} returns a string (@pxref{Strings of Events}).
2201 Otherwise, it returns a vector, since a vector can hold all kinds of
2202 events---characters, symbols, and lists. The elements of the string or
2203 vector are the events in the key sequence.
2204
2205 Reading a key sequence includes translating the events in various
2206 ways. @xref{Translation Keymaps}.
2207
2208 The argument @var{prompt} is either a string to be displayed in the
2209 echo area as a prompt, or @code{nil}, meaning not to display a prompt.
2210 The argument @var{continue-echo}, if non-@code{nil}, means to echo
2211 this key as a continuation of the previous key.
2212
2213 Normally any upper case event is converted to lower case if the
2214 original event is undefined and the lower case equivalent is defined.
2215 The argument @var{dont-downcase-last}, if non-@code{nil}, means do not
2216 convert the last event to lower case. This is appropriate for reading
2217 a key sequence to be defined.
2218
2219 The argument @var{switch-frame-ok}, if non-@code{nil}, means that this
2220 function should process a @code{switch-frame} event if the user
2221 switches frames before typing anything. If the user switches frames
2222 in the middle of a key sequence, or at the start of the sequence but
2223 @var{switch-frame-ok} is @code{nil}, then the event will be put off
2224 until after the current key sequence.
2225
2226 The argument @var{command-loop}, if non-@code{nil}, means that this
2227 key sequence is being read by something that will read commands one
2228 after another. It should be @code{nil} if the caller will read just
2229 one key sequence.
2230
2231 In the following example, Emacs displays the prompt @samp{?} in the
2232 echo area, and then the user types @kbd{C-x C-f}.
2233
2234 @example
2235 (read-key-sequence "?")
2236
2237 @group
2238 ---------- Echo Area ----------
2239 ?@kbd{C-x C-f}
2240 ---------- Echo Area ----------
2241
2242 @result{} "^X^F"
2243 @end group
2244 @end example
2245
2246 The function @code{read-key-sequence} suppresses quitting: @kbd{C-g}
2247 typed while reading with this function works like any other character,
2248 and does not set @code{quit-flag}. @xref{Quitting}.
2249 @end defun
2250
2251 @defun read-key-sequence-vector prompt &optional continue-echo dont-downcase-last switch-frame-ok command-loop
2252 This is like @code{read-key-sequence} except that it always
2253 returns the key sequence as a vector, never as a string.
2254 @xref{Strings of Events}.
2255 @end defun
2256
2257 @cindex upper case key sequence
2258 @cindex downcasing in @code{lookup-key}
2259 @cindex shift-translation
2260 If an input character is upper-case (or has the shift modifier) and
2261 has no key binding, but its lower-case equivalent has one, then
2262 @code{read-key-sequence} converts the character to lower case. Note
2263 that @code{lookup-key} does not perform case conversion in this way.
2264
2265 @vindex this-command-keys-shift-translated
2266 When reading input results in such a @dfn{shift-translation}, Emacs
2267 sets the variable @code{this-command-keys-shift-translated} to a
2268 non-@code{nil} value. Lisp programs can examine this variable if they
2269 need to modify their behavior when invoked by shift-translated keys.
2270 For example, the function @code{handle-shift-selection} examines the
2271 value of this variable to determine how to activate or deactivate the
2272 region (@pxref{The Mark, handle-shift-selection}).
2273
2274 The function @code{read-key-sequence} also transforms some mouse events.
2275 It converts unbound drag events into click events, and discards unbound
2276 button-down events entirely. It also reshuffles focus events and
2277 miscellaneous window events so that they never appear in a key sequence
2278 with any other events.
2279
2280 @cindex @code{header-line} prefix key
2281 @cindex @code{mode-line} prefix key
2282 @cindex @code{vertical-line} prefix key
2283 @cindex @code{horizontal-scroll-bar} prefix key
2284 @cindex @code{vertical-scroll-bar} prefix key
2285 @cindex @code{menu-bar} prefix key
2286 @cindex mouse events, in special parts of frame
2287 When mouse events occur in special parts of a window, such as a mode
2288 line or a scroll bar, the event type shows nothing special---it is the
2289 same symbol that would normally represent that combination of mouse
2290 button and modifier keys. The information about the window part is kept
2291 elsewhere in the event---in the coordinates. But
2292 @code{read-key-sequence} translates this information into imaginary
2293 ``prefix keys,'' all of which are symbols: @code{header-line},
2294 @code{horizontal-scroll-bar}, @code{menu-bar}, @code{mode-line},
2295 @code{vertical-line}, and @code{vertical-scroll-bar}. You can define
2296 meanings for mouse clicks in special window parts by defining key
2297 sequences using these imaginary prefix keys.
2298
2299 For example, if you call @code{read-key-sequence} and then click the
2300 mouse on the window's mode line, you get two events, like this:
2301
2302 @example
2303 (read-key-sequence "Click on the mode line: ")
2304 @result{} [mode-line
2305 (mouse-1
2306 (#<window 6 on NEWS> mode-line
2307 (40 . 63) 5959987))]
2308 @end example
2309
2310 @defvar num-input-keys
2311 @c Emacs 19 feature
2312 This variable's value is the number of key sequences processed so far in
2313 this Emacs session. This includes key sequences read from the terminal
2314 and key sequences read from keyboard macros being executed.
2315 @end defvar
2316
2317 @node Reading One Event
2318 @subsection Reading One Event
2319 @cindex reading a single event
2320 @cindex event, reading only one
2321
2322 The lowest level functions for command input are @code{read-event},
2323 @code{read-char}, and @code{read-char-exclusive}.
2324
2325 @defun read-event &optional prompt inherit-input-method seconds
2326 This function reads and returns the next event of command input, waiting
2327 if necessary until an event is available. Events can come directly from
2328 the user or from a keyboard macro.
2329
2330 If the optional argument @var{prompt} is non-@code{nil}, it should be a
2331 string to display in the echo area as a prompt. Otherwise,
2332 @code{read-event} does not display any message to indicate it is waiting
2333 for input; instead, it prompts by echoing: it displays descriptions of
2334 the events that led to or were read by the current command. @xref{The
2335 Echo Area}.
2336
2337 If @var{inherit-input-method} is non-@code{nil}, then the current input
2338 method (if any) is employed to make it possible to enter a
2339 non-@acronym{ASCII} character. Otherwise, input method handling is disabled
2340 for reading this event.
2341
2342 If @code{cursor-in-echo-area} is non-@code{nil}, then @code{read-event}
2343 moves the cursor temporarily to the echo area, to the end of any message
2344 displayed there. Otherwise @code{read-event} does not move the cursor.
2345
2346 If @var{seconds} is non-@code{nil}, it should be a number specifying
2347 the maximum time to wait for input, in seconds. If no input arrives
2348 within that time, @code{read-event} stops waiting and returns
2349 @code{nil}. A floating-point value for @var{seconds} means to wait
2350 for a fractional number of seconds. Some systems support only a whole
2351 number of seconds; on these systems, @var{seconds} is rounded down.
2352 If @var{seconds} is @code{nil}, @code{read-event} waits as long as
2353 necessary for input to arrive.
2354
2355 If @var{seconds} is @code{nil}, Emacs is considered idle while waiting
2356 for user input to arrive. Idle timers---those created with
2357 @code{run-with-idle-timer} (@pxref{Idle Timers})---can run during this
2358 period. However, if @var{seconds} is non-@code{nil}, the state of
2359 idleness remains unchanged. If Emacs is non-idle when
2360 @code{read-event} is called, it remains non-idle throughout the
2361 operation of @code{read-event}; if Emacs is idle (which can happen if
2362 the call happens inside an idle timer), it remains idle.
2363
2364 If @code{read-event} gets an event that is defined as a help character,
2365 then in some cases @code{read-event} processes the event directly without
2366 returning. @xref{Help Functions}. Certain other events, called
2367 @dfn{special events}, are also processed directly within
2368 @code{read-event} (@pxref{Special Events}).
2369
2370 Here is what happens if you call @code{read-event} and then press the
2371 right-arrow function key:
2372
2373 @example
2374 @group
2375 (read-event)
2376 @result{} right
2377 @end group
2378 @end example
2379 @end defun
2380
2381 @defun read-char &optional prompt inherit-input-method seconds
2382 This function reads and returns a character of command input. If the
2383 user generates an event which is not a character (i.e. a mouse click or
2384 function key event), @code{read-char} signals an error. The arguments
2385 work as in @code{read-event}.
2386
2387 In the first example, the user types the character @kbd{1} (@acronym{ASCII}
2388 code 49). The second example shows a keyboard macro definition that
2389 calls @code{read-char} from the minibuffer using @code{eval-expression}.
2390 @code{read-char} reads the keyboard macro's very next character, which
2391 is @kbd{1}. Then @code{eval-expression} displays its return value in
2392 the echo area.
2393
2394 @example
2395 @group
2396 (read-char)
2397 @result{} 49
2398 @end group
2399
2400 @group
2401 ;; @r{We assume here you use @kbd{M-:} to evaluate this.}
2402 (symbol-function 'foo)
2403 @result{} "^[:(read-char)^M1"
2404 @end group
2405 @group
2406 (execute-kbd-macro 'foo)
2407 @print{} 49
2408 @result{} nil
2409 @end group
2410 @end example
2411 @end defun
2412
2413 @defun read-char-exclusive &optional prompt inherit-input-method seconds
2414 This function reads and returns a character of command input. If the
2415 user generates an event which is not a character,
2416 @code{read-char-exclusive} ignores it and reads another event, until it
2417 gets a character. The arguments work as in @code{read-event}.
2418 @end defun
2419
2420 None of the above functions suppress quitting.
2421
2422 @defvar num-nonmacro-input-events
2423 This variable holds the total number of input events received so far
2424 from the terminal---not counting those generated by keyboard macros.
2425 @end defvar
2426
2427 We emphasize that, unlike @code{read-key-sequence}, the functions
2428 @code{read-event}, @code{read-char}, and @code{read-char-exclusive} do
2429 not perform the translations described in @ref{Translation Keymaps}.
2430 If you wish to read a single key taking these translations into
2431 account, use the function @code{read-key}:
2432
2433 @defun read-key &optional prompt
2434 This function reads a single key. It is ``intermediate'' between
2435 @code{read-key-sequence} and @code{read-event}. Unlike the former, it
2436 reads a single key, not a key sequence. Unlike the latter, it does
2437 not return a raw event, but decodes and translates the user input
2438 according to @code{input-decode-map}, @code{local-function-key-map},
2439 and @code{key-translation-map} (@pxref{Translation Keymaps}).
2440
2441 The argument @var{prompt} is either a string to be displayed in the
2442 echo area as a prompt, or @code{nil}, meaning not to display a prompt.
2443 @end defun
2444
2445 @node Event Mod
2446 @subsection Modifying and Translating Input Events
2447
2448 Emacs modifies every event it reads according to
2449 @code{extra-keyboard-modifiers}, then translates it through
2450 @code{keyboard-translate-table} (if applicable), before returning it
2451 from @code{read-event}.
2452
2453 @c Emacs 19 feature
2454 @defvar extra-keyboard-modifiers
2455 This variable lets Lisp programs ``press'' the modifier keys on the
2456 keyboard. The value is a character. Only the modifiers of the
2457 character matter. Each time the user types a keyboard key, it is
2458 altered as if those modifier keys were held down. For instance, if
2459 you bind @code{extra-keyboard-modifiers} to @code{?\C-\M-a}, then all
2460 keyboard input characters typed during the scope of the binding will
2461 have the control and meta modifiers applied to them. The character
2462 @code{?\C-@@}, equivalent to the integer 0, does not count as a control
2463 character for this purpose, but as a character with no modifiers.
2464 Thus, setting @code{extra-keyboard-modifiers} to zero cancels any
2465 modification.
2466
2467 When using a window system, the program can ``press'' any of the
2468 modifier keys in this way. Otherwise, only the @key{CTL} and @key{META}
2469 keys can be virtually pressed.
2470
2471 Note that this variable applies only to events that really come from
2472 the keyboard, and has no effect on mouse events or any other events.
2473 @end defvar
2474
2475 @defvar keyboard-translate-table
2476 This terminal-local variable is the translate table for keyboard
2477 characters. It lets you reshuffle the keys on the keyboard without
2478 changing any command bindings. Its value is normally a char-table, or
2479 else @code{nil}. (It can also be a string or vector, but this is
2480 considered obsolete.)
2481
2482 If @code{keyboard-translate-table} is a char-table
2483 (@pxref{Char-Tables}), then each character read from the keyboard is
2484 looked up in this char-table. If the value found there is
2485 non-@code{nil}, then it is used instead of the actual input character.
2486
2487 Note that this translation is the first thing that happens to a
2488 character after it is read from the terminal. Record-keeping features
2489 such as @code{recent-keys} and dribble files record the characters after
2490 translation.
2491
2492 Note also that this translation is done before the characters are
2493 supplied to input methods (@pxref{Input Methods}). Use
2494 @code{translation-table-for-input} (@pxref{Translation of Characters}),
2495 if you want to translate characters after input methods operate.
2496 @end defvar
2497
2498 @defun keyboard-translate from to
2499 This function modifies @code{keyboard-translate-table} to translate
2500 character code @var{from} into character code @var{to}. It creates
2501 the keyboard translate table if necessary.
2502 @end defun
2503
2504 Here's an example of using the @code{keyboard-translate-table} to
2505 make @kbd{C-x}, @kbd{C-c} and @kbd{C-v} perform the cut, copy and paste
2506 operations:
2507
2508 @example
2509 (keyboard-translate ?\C-x 'control-x)
2510 (keyboard-translate ?\C-c 'control-c)
2511 (keyboard-translate ?\C-v 'control-v)
2512 (global-set-key [control-x] 'kill-region)
2513 (global-set-key [control-c] 'kill-ring-save)
2514 (global-set-key [control-v] 'yank)
2515 @end example
2516
2517 @noindent
2518 On a graphical terminal that supports extended @acronym{ASCII} input,
2519 you can still get the standard Emacs meanings of one of those
2520 characters by typing it with the shift key. That makes it a different
2521 character as far as keyboard translation is concerned, but it has the
2522 same usual meaning.
2523
2524 @xref{Translation Keymaps}, for mechanisms that translate event sequences
2525 at the level of @code{read-key-sequence}.
2526
2527 @node Invoking the Input Method
2528 @subsection Invoking the Input Method
2529
2530 The event-reading functions invoke the current input method, if any
2531 (@pxref{Input Methods}). If the value of @code{input-method-function}
2532 is non-@code{nil}, it should be a function; when @code{read-event} reads
2533 a printing character (including @key{SPC}) with no modifier bits, it
2534 calls that function, passing the character as an argument.
2535
2536 @defvar input-method-function
2537 If this is non-@code{nil}, its value specifies the current input method
2538 function.
2539
2540 @strong{Warning:} don't bind this variable with @code{let}. It is often
2541 buffer-local, and if you bind it around reading input (which is exactly
2542 when you @emph{would} bind it), switching buffers asynchronously while
2543 Emacs is waiting will cause the value to be restored in the wrong
2544 buffer.
2545 @end defvar
2546
2547 The input method function should return a list of events which should
2548 be used as input. (If the list is @code{nil}, that means there is no
2549 input, so @code{read-event} waits for another event.) These events are
2550 processed before the events in @code{unread-command-events}
2551 (@pxref{Event Input Misc}). Events
2552 returned by the input method function are not passed to the input method
2553 function again, even if they are printing characters with no modifier
2554 bits.
2555
2556 If the input method function calls @code{read-event} or
2557 @code{read-key-sequence}, it should bind @code{input-method-function} to
2558 @code{nil} first, to prevent recursion.
2559
2560 The input method function is not called when reading the second and
2561 subsequent events of a key sequence. Thus, these characters are not
2562 subject to input method processing. The input method function should
2563 test the values of @code{overriding-local-map} and
2564 @code{overriding-terminal-local-map}; if either of these variables is
2565 non-@code{nil}, the input method should put its argument into a list and
2566 return that list with no further processing.
2567
2568 @node Quoted Character Input
2569 @subsection Quoted Character Input
2570 @cindex quoted character input
2571
2572 You can use the function @code{read-quoted-char} to ask the user to
2573 specify a character, and allow the user to specify a control or meta
2574 character conveniently, either literally or as an octal character code.
2575 The command @code{quoted-insert} uses this function.
2576
2577 @defun read-quoted-char &optional prompt
2578 @cindex octal character input
2579 @cindex control characters, reading
2580 @cindex nonprinting characters, reading
2581 This function is like @code{read-char}, except that if the first
2582 character read is an octal digit (0-7), it reads any number of octal
2583 digits (but stopping if a non-octal digit is found), and returns the
2584 character represented by that numeric character code. If the
2585 character that terminates the sequence of octal digits is @key{RET},
2586 it is discarded. Any other terminating character is used as input
2587 after this function returns.
2588
2589 Quitting is suppressed when the first character is read, so that the
2590 user can enter a @kbd{C-g}. @xref{Quitting}.
2591
2592 If @var{prompt} is supplied, it specifies a string for prompting the
2593 user. The prompt string is always displayed in the echo area, followed
2594 by a single @samp{-}.
2595
2596 In the following example, the user types in the octal number 177 (which
2597 is 127 in decimal).
2598
2599 @example
2600 (read-quoted-char "What character")
2601
2602 @group
2603 ---------- Echo Area ----------
2604 What character @kbd{1 7 7}-
2605 ---------- Echo Area ----------
2606
2607 @result{} 127
2608 @end group
2609 @end example
2610 @end defun
2611
2612 @need 2000
2613 @node Event Input Misc
2614 @subsection Miscellaneous Event Input Features
2615
2616 This section describes how to ``peek ahead'' at events without using
2617 them up, how to check for pending input, and how to discard pending
2618 input. See also the function @code{read-passwd} (@pxref{Reading a
2619 Password}).
2620
2621 @defvar unread-command-events
2622 @cindex next input
2623 @cindex peeking at input
2624 This variable holds a list of events waiting to be read as command
2625 input. The events are used in the order they appear in the list, and
2626 removed one by one as they are used.
2627
2628 The variable is needed because in some cases a function reads an event
2629 and then decides not to use it. Storing the event in this variable
2630 causes it to be processed normally, by the command loop or by the
2631 functions to read command input.
2632
2633 @cindex prefix argument unreading
2634 For example, the function that implements numeric prefix arguments reads
2635 any number of digits. When it finds a non-digit event, it must unread
2636 the event so that it can be read normally by the command loop.
2637 Likewise, incremental search uses this feature to unread events with no
2638 special meaning in a search, because these events should exit the search
2639 and then execute normally.
2640
2641 The reliable and easy way to extract events from a key sequence so as to
2642 put them in @code{unread-command-events} is to use
2643 @code{listify-key-sequence} (@pxref{Strings of Events}).
2644
2645 Normally you add events to the front of this list, so that the events
2646 most recently unread will be reread first.
2647
2648 Events read from this list are not normally added to the current
2649 command's key sequence (as returned by e.g. @code{this-command-keys}),
2650 as the events will already have been added once as they were read for
2651 the first time. An element of the form @code{(@code{t} . @var{event})}
2652 forces @var{event} to be added to the current command's key sequence.
2653 @end defvar
2654
2655 @defun listify-key-sequence key
2656 This function converts the string or vector @var{key} to a list of
2657 individual events, which you can put in @code{unread-command-events}.
2658 @end defun
2659
2660 @defvar unread-command-char
2661 This variable holds a character to be read as command input.
2662 A value of -1 means ``empty.''
2663
2664 This variable is mostly obsolete now that you can use
2665 @code{unread-command-events} instead; it exists only to support programs
2666 written for Emacs versions 18 and earlier.
2667 @end defvar
2668
2669 @defun input-pending-p
2670 @cindex waiting for command key input
2671 This function determines whether any command input is currently
2672 available to be read. It returns immediately, with value @code{t} if
2673 there is available input, @code{nil} otherwise. On rare occasions it
2674 may return @code{t} when no input is available.
2675 @end defun
2676
2677 @defvar last-input-event
2678 @defvarx last-input-char
2679 This variable records the last terminal input event read, whether
2680 as part of a command or explicitly by a Lisp program.
2681
2682 In the example below, the Lisp program reads the character @kbd{1},
2683 @acronym{ASCII} code 49. It becomes the value of @code{last-input-event},
2684 while @kbd{C-e} (we assume @kbd{C-x C-e} command is used to evaluate
2685 this expression) remains the value of @code{last-command-event}.
2686
2687 @example
2688 @group
2689 (progn (print (read-char))
2690 (print last-command-event)
2691 last-input-event)
2692 @print{} 49
2693 @print{} 5
2694 @result{} 49
2695 @end group
2696 @end example
2697
2698 The alias @code{last-input-char} is obsolete.
2699 @end defvar
2700
2701 @defmac while-no-input body@dots{}
2702 This construct runs the @var{body} forms and returns the value of the
2703 last one---but only if no input arrives. If any input arrives during
2704 the execution of the @var{body} forms, it aborts them (working much
2705 like a quit). The @code{while-no-input} form returns @code{nil} if
2706 aborted by a real quit, and returns @code{t} if aborted by arrival of
2707 other input.
2708
2709 If a part of @var{body} binds @code{inhibit-quit} to non-@code{nil},
2710 arrival of input during those parts won't cause an abort until
2711 the end of that part.
2712
2713 If you want to be able to distinguish all possible values computed
2714 by @var{body} from both kinds of abort conditions, write the code
2715 like this:
2716
2717 @example
2718 (while-no-input
2719 (list
2720 (progn . @var{body})))
2721 @end example
2722 @end defmac
2723
2724 @defun discard-input
2725 @cindex flushing input
2726 @cindex discarding input
2727 @cindex keyboard macro, terminating
2728 This function discards the contents of the terminal input buffer and
2729 cancels any keyboard macro that might be in the process of definition.
2730 It returns @code{nil}.
2731
2732 In the following example, the user may type a number of characters right
2733 after starting the evaluation of the form. After the @code{sleep-for}
2734 finishes sleeping, @code{discard-input} discards any characters typed
2735 during the sleep.
2736
2737 @example
2738 (progn (sleep-for 2)
2739 (discard-input))
2740 @result{} nil
2741 @end example
2742 @end defun
2743
2744 @node Special Events
2745 @section Special Events
2746
2747 @cindex special events
2748 Special events are handled at a very low level---as soon as they are
2749 read. The @code{read-event} function processes these events itself, and
2750 never returns them. Instead, it keeps waiting for the first event
2751 that is not special and returns that one.
2752
2753 Events that are handled in this way do not echo, they are never grouped
2754 into key sequences, and they never appear in the value of
2755 @code{last-command-event} or @code{(this-command-keys)}. They do not
2756 discard a numeric argument, they cannot be unread with
2757 @code{unread-command-events}, they may not appear in a keyboard macro,
2758 and they are not recorded in a keyboard macro while you are defining
2759 one.
2760
2761 These events do, however, appear in @code{last-input-event} immediately
2762 after they are read, and this is the way for the event's definition to
2763 find the actual event.
2764
2765 The events types @code{iconify-frame}, @code{make-frame-visible},
2766 @code{delete-frame}, @code{drag-n-drop}, and user signals like
2767 @code{sigusr1} are normally handled in this way. The keymap which
2768 defines how to handle special events---and which events are special---is
2769 in the variable @code{special-event-map} (@pxref{Active Keymaps}).
2770
2771 @node Waiting
2772 @section Waiting for Elapsed Time or Input
2773 @cindex waiting
2774
2775 The wait functions are designed to wait for a certain amount of time
2776 to pass or until there is input. For example, you may wish to pause in
2777 the middle of a computation to allow the user time to view the display.
2778 @code{sit-for} pauses and updates the screen, and returns immediately if
2779 input comes in, while @code{sleep-for} pauses without updating the
2780 screen.
2781
2782 @defun sit-for seconds &optional nodisp
2783 This function performs redisplay (provided there is no pending input
2784 from the user), then waits @var{seconds} seconds, or until input is
2785 available. The usual purpose of @code{sit-for} is to give the user
2786 time to read text that you display. The value is @code{t} if
2787 @code{sit-for} waited the full time with no input arriving
2788 (@pxref{Event Input Misc}). Otherwise, the value is @code{nil}.
2789
2790 The argument @var{seconds} need not be an integer. If it is a floating
2791 point number, @code{sit-for} waits for a fractional number of seconds.
2792 Some systems support only a whole number of seconds; on these systems,
2793 @var{seconds} is rounded down.
2794
2795 The expression @code{(sit-for 0)} is equivalent to @code{(redisplay)},
2796 i.e. it requests a redisplay, without any delay, if there is no pending input.
2797 @xref{Forcing Redisplay}.
2798
2799 If @var{nodisp} is non-@code{nil}, then @code{sit-for} does not
2800 redisplay, but it still returns as soon as input is available (or when
2801 the timeout elapses).
2802
2803 In batch mode (@pxref{Batch Mode}), @code{sit-for} cannot be
2804 interrupted, even by input from the standard input descriptor. It is
2805 thus equivalent to @code{sleep-for}, which is described below.
2806
2807 It is also possible to call @code{sit-for} with three arguments,
2808 as @code{(sit-for @var{seconds} @var{millisec} @var{nodisp})},
2809 but that is considered obsolete.
2810 @end defun
2811
2812 @defun sleep-for seconds &optional millisec
2813 This function simply pauses for @var{seconds} seconds without updating
2814 the display. It pays no attention to available input. It returns
2815 @code{nil}.
2816
2817 The argument @var{seconds} need not be an integer. If it is a floating
2818 point number, @code{sleep-for} waits for a fractional number of seconds.
2819 Some systems support only a whole number of seconds; on these systems,
2820 @var{seconds} is rounded down.
2821
2822 The optional argument @var{millisec} specifies an additional waiting
2823 period measured in milliseconds. This adds to the period specified by
2824 @var{seconds}. If the system doesn't support waiting fractions of a
2825 second, you get an error if you specify nonzero @var{millisec}.
2826
2827 Use @code{sleep-for} when you wish to guarantee a delay.
2828 @end defun
2829
2830 @xref{Time of Day}, for functions to get the current time.
2831
2832 @node Quitting
2833 @section Quitting
2834 @cindex @kbd{C-g}
2835 @cindex quitting
2836 @cindex interrupt Lisp functions
2837
2838 Typing @kbd{C-g} while a Lisp function is running causes Emacs to
2839 @dfn{quit} whatever it is doing. This means that control returns to the
2840 innermost active command loop.
2841
2842 Typing @kbd{C-g} while the command loop is waiting for keyboard input
2843 does not cause a quit; it acts as an ordinary input character. In the
2844 simplest case, you cannot tell the difference, because @kbd{C-g}
2845 normally runs the command @code{keyboard-quit}, whose effect is to quit.
2846 However, when @kbd{C-g} follows a prefix key, they combine to form an
2847 undefined key. The effect is to cancel the prefix key as well as any
2848 prefix argument.
2849
2850 In the minibuffer, @kbd{C-g} has a different definition: it aborts out
2851 of the minibuffer. This means, in effect, that it exits the minibuffer
2852 and then quits. (Simply quitting would return to the command loop
2853 @emph{within} the minibuffer.) The reason why @kbd{C-g} does not quit
2854 directly when the command reader is reading input is so that its meaning
2855 can be redefined in the minibuffer in this way. @kbd{C-g} following a
2856 prefix key is not redefined in the minibuffer, and it has its normal
2857 effect of canceling the prefix key and prefix argument. This too
2858 would not be possible if @kbd{C-g} always quit directly.
2859
2860 When @kbd{C-g} does directly quit, it does so by setting the variable
2861 @code{quit-flag} to @code{t}. Emacs checks this variable at appropriate
2862 times and quits if it is not @code{nil}. Setting @code{quit-flag}
2863 non-@code{nil} in any way thus causes a quit.
2864
2865 At the level of C code, quitting cannot happen just anywhere; only at the
2866 special places that check @code{quit-flag}. The reason for this is
2867 that quitting at other places might leave an inconsistency in Emacs's
2868 internal state. Because quitting is delayed until a safe place, quitting
2869 cannot make Emacs crash.
2870
2871 Certain functions such as @code{read-key-sequence} or
2872 @code{read-quoted-char} prevent quitting entirely even though they wait
2873 for input. Instead of quitting, @kbd{C-g} serves as the requested
2874 input. In the case of @code{read-key-sequence}, this serves to bring
2875 about the special behavior of @kbd{C-g} in the command loop. In the
2876 case of @code{read-quoted-char}, this is so that @kbd{C-q} can be used
2877 to quote a @kbd{C-g}.
2878
2879 @cindex preventing quitting
2880 You can prevent quitting for a portion of a Lisp function by binding
2881 the variable @code{inhibit-quit} to a non-@code{nil} value. Then,
2882 although @kbd{C-g} still sets @code{quit-flag} to @code{t} as usual, the
2883 usual result of this---a quit---is prevented. Eventually,
2884 @code{inhibit-quit} will become @code{nil} again, such as when its
2885 binding is unwound at the end of a @code{let} form. At that time, if
2886 @code{quit-flag} is still non-@code{nil}, the requested quit happens
2887 immediately. This behavior is ideal when you wish to make sure that
2888 quitting does not happen within a ``critical section'' of the program.
2889
2890 @cindex @code{read-quoted-char} quitting
2891 In some functions (such as @code{read-quoted-char}), @kbd{C-g} is
2892 handled in a special way that does not involve quitting. This is done
2893 by reading the input with @code{inhibit-quit} bound to @code{t}, and
2894 setting @code{quit-flag} to @code{nil} before @code{inhibit-quit}
2895 becomes @code{nil} again. This excerpt from the definition of
2896 @code{read-quoted-char} shows how this is done; it also shows that
2897 normal quitting is permitted after the first character of input.
2898
2899 @example
2900 (defun read-quoted-char (&optional prompt)
2901 "@dots{}@var{documentation}@dots{}"
2902 (let ((message-log-max nil) done (first t) (code 0) char)
2903 (while (not done)
2904 (let ((inhibit-quit first)
2905 @dots{})
2906 (and prompt (message "%s-" prompt))
2907 (setq char (read-event))
2908 (if inhibit-quit (setq quit-flag nil)))
2909 @r{@dots{}set the variable @code{code}@dots{}})
2910 code))
2911 @end example
2912
2913 @defvar quit-flag
2914 If this variable is non-@code{nil}, then Emacs quits immediately, unless
2915 @code{inhibit-quit} is non-@code{nil}. Typing @kbd{C-g} ordinarily sets
2916 @code{quit-flag} non-@code{nil}, regardless of @code{inhibit-quit}.
2917 @end defvar
2918
2919 @defvar inhibit-quit
2920 This variable determines whether Emacs should quit when @code{quit-flag}
2921 is set to a value other than @code{nil}. If @code{inhibit-quit} is
2922 non-@code{nil}, then @code{quit-flag} has no special effect.
2923 @end defvar
2924
2925 @defmac with-local-quit body@dots{}
2926 This macro executes @var{body} forms in sequence, but allows quitting, at
2927 least locally, within @var{body} even if @code{inhibit-quit} was
2928 non-@code{nil} outside this construct. It returns the value of the
2929 last form in @var{body}, unless exited by quitting, in which case
2930 it returns @code{nil}.
2931
2932 If @code{inhibit-quit} is @code{nil} on entry to @code{with-local-quit},
2933 it only executes the @var{body}, and setting @code{quit-flag} causes
2934 a normal quit. However, if @code{inhibit-quit} is non-@code{nil} so
2935 that ordinary quitting is delayed, a non-@code{nil} @code{quit-flag}
2936 triggers a special kind of local quit. This ends the execution of
2937 @var{body} and exits the @code{with-local-quit} body with
2938 @code{quit-flag} still non-@code{nil}, so that another (ordinary) quit
2939 will happen as soon as that is allowed. If @code{quit-flag} is
2940 already non-@code{nil} at the beginning of @var{body}, the local quit
2941 happens immediately and the body doesn't execute at all.
2942
2943 This macro is mainly useful in functions that can be called from
2944 timers, process filters, process sentinels, @code{pre-command-hook},
2945 @code{post-command-hook}, and other places where @code{inhibit-quit} is
2946 normally bound to @code{t}.
2947 @end defmac
2948
2949 @deffn Command keyboard-quit
2950 This function signals the @code{quit} condition with @code{(signal 'quit
2951 nil)}. This is the same thing that quitting does. (See @code{signal}
2952 in @ref{Errors}.)
2953 @end deffn
2954
2955 You can specify a character other than @kbd{C-g} to use for quitting.
2956 See the function @code{set-input-mode} in @ref{Terminal Input}.
2957
2958 @node Prefix Command Arguments
2959 @section Prefix Command Arguments
2960 @cindex prefix argument
2961 @cindex raw prefix argument
2962 @cindex numeric prefix argument
2963
2964 Most Emacs commands can use a @dfn{prefix argument}, a number
2965 specified before the command itself. (Don't confuse prefix arguments
2966 with prefix keys.) The prefix argument is at all times represented by a
2967 value, which may be @code{nil}, meaning there is currently no prefix
2968 argument. Each command may use the prefix argument or ignore it.
2969
2970 There are two representations of the prefix argument: @dfn{raw} and
2971 @dfn{numeric}. The editor command loop uses the raw representation
2972 internally, and so do the Lisp variables that store the information, but
2973 commands can request either representation.
2974
2975 Here are the possible values of a raw prefix argument:
2976
2977 @itemize @bullet
2978 @item
2979 @code{nil}, meaning there is no prefix argument. Its numeric value is
2980 1, but numerous commands make a distinction between @code{nil} and the
2981 integer 1.
2982
2983 @item
2984 An integer, which stands for itself.
2985
2986 @item
2987 A list of one element, which is an integer. This form of prefix
2988 argument results from one or a succession of @kbd{C-u}'s with no
2989 digits. The numeric value is the integer in the list, but some
2990 commands make a distinction between such a list and an integer alone.
2991
2992 @item
2993 The symbol @code{-}. This indicates that @kbd{M--} or @kbd{C-u -} was
2994 typed, without following digits. The equivalent numeric value is
2995 @minus{}1, but some commands make a distinction between the integer
2996 @minus{}1 and the symbol @code{-}.
2997 @end itemize
2998
2999 We illustrate these possibilities by calling the following function with
3000 various prefixes:
3001
3002 @example
3003 @group
3004 (defun display-prefix (arg)
3005 "Display the value of the raw prefix arg."
3006 (interactive "P")
3007 (message "%s" arg))
3008 @end group
3009 @end example
3010
3011 @noindent
3012 Here are the results of calling @code{display-prefix} with various
3013 raw prefix arguments:
3014
3015 @example
3016 M-x display-prefix @print{} nil
3017
3018 C-u M-x display-prefix @print{} (4)
3019
3020 C-u C-u M-x display-prefix @print{} (16)
3021
3022 C-u 3 M-x display-prefix @print{} 3
3023
3024 M-3 M-x display-prefix @print{} 3 ; @r{(Same as @code{C-u 3}.)}
3025
3026 C-u - M-x display-prefix @print{} -
3027
3028 M-- M-x display-prefix @print{} - ; @r{(Same as @code{C-u -}.)}
3029
3030 C-u - 7 M-x display-prefix @print{} -7
3031
3032 M-- 7 M-x display-prefix @print{} -7 ; @r{(Same as @code{C-u -7}.)}
3033 @end example
3034
3035 Emacs uses two variables to store the prefix argument:
3036 @code{prefix-arg} and @code{current-prefix-arg}. Commands such as
3037 @code{universal-argument} that set up prefix arguments for other
3038 commands store them in @code{prefix-arg}. In contrast,
3039 @code{current-prefix-arg} conveys the prefix argument to the current
3040 command, so setting it has no effect on the prefix arguments for future
3041 commands.
3042
3043 Normally, commands specify which representation to use for the prefix
3044 argument, either numeric or raw, in the @code{interactive} specification.
3045 (@xref{Using Interactive}.) Alternatively, functions may look at the
3046 value of the prefix argument directly in the variable
3047 @code{current-prefix-arg}, but this is less clean.
3048
3049 @defun prefix-numeric-value arg
3050 This function returns the numeric meaning of a valid raw prefix argument
3051 value, @var{arg}. The argument may be a symbol, a number, or a list.
3052 If it is @code{nil}, the value 1 is returned; if it is @code{-}, the
3053 value @minus{}1 is returned; if it is a number, that number is returned;
3054 if it is a list, the @sc{car} of that list (which should be a number) is
3055 returned.
3056 @end defun
3057
3058 @defvar current-prefix-arg
3059 This variable holds the raw prefix argument for the @emph{current}
3060 command. Commands may examine it directly, but the usual method for
3061 accessing it is with @code{(interactive "P")}.
3062 @end defvar
3063
3064 @defvar prefix-arg
3065 The value of this variable is the raw prefix argument for the
3066 @emph{next} editing command. Commands such as @code{universal-argument}
3067 that specify prefix arguments for the following command work by setting
3068 this variable.
3069 @end defvar
3070
3071 @defvar last-prefix-arg
3072 The raw prefix argument value used by the previous command.
3073 @end defvar
3074
3075 The following commands exist to set up prefix arguments for the
3076 following command. Do not call them for any other reason.
3077
3078 @deffn Command universal-argument
3079 This command reads input and specifies a prefix argument for the
3080 following command. Don't call this command yourself unless you know
3081 what you are doing.
3082 @end deffn
3083
3084 @deffn Command digit-argument arg
3085 This command adds to the prefix argument for the following command. The
3086 argument @var{arg} is the raw prefix argument as it was before this
3087 command; it is used to compute the updated prefix argument. Don't call
3088 this command yourself unless you know what you are doing.
3089 @end deffn
3090
3091 @deffn Command negative-argument arg
3092 This command adds to the numeric argument for the next command. The
3093 argument @var{arg} is the raw prefix argument as it was before this
3094 command; its value is negated to form the new prefix argument. Don't
3095 call this command yourself unless you know what you are doing.
3096 @end deffn
3097
3098 @node Recursive Editing
3099 @section Recursive Editing
3100 @cindex recursive command loop
3101 @cindex recursive editing level
3102 @cindex command loop, recursive
3103
3104 The Emacs command loop is entered automatically when Emacs starts up.
3105 This top-level invocation of the command loop never exits; it keeps
3106 running as long as Emacs does. Lisp programs can also invoke the
3107 command loop. Since this makes more than one activation of the command
3108 loop, we call it @dfn{recursive editing}. A recursive editing level has
3109 the effect of suspending whatever command invoked it and permitting the
3110 user to do arbitrary editing before resuming that command.
3111
3112 The commands available during recursive editing are the same ones
3113 available in the top-level editing loop and defined in the keymaps.
3114 Only a few special commands exit the recursive editing level; the others
3115 return to the recursive editing level when they finish. (The special
3116 commands for exiting are always available, but they do nothing when
3117 recursive editing is not in progress.)
3118
3119 All command loops, including recursive ones, set up all-purpose error
3120 handlers so that an error in a command run from the command loop will
3121 not exit the loop.
3122
3123 @cindex minibuffer input
3124 Minibuffer input is a special kind of recursive editing. It has a few
3125 special wrinkles, such as enabling display of the minibuffer and the
3126 minibuffer window, but fewer than you might suppose. Certain keys
3127 behave differently in the minibuffer, but that is only because of the
3128 minibuffer's local map; if you switch windows, you get the usual Emacs
3129 commands.
3130
3131 @cindex @code{throw} example
3132 @kindex exit
3133 @cindex exit recursive editing
3134 @cindex aborting
3135 To invoke a recursive editing level, call the function
3136 @code{recursive-edit}. This function contains the command loop; it also
3137 contains a call to @code{catch} with tag @code{exit}, which makes it
3138 possible to exit the recursive editing level by throwing to @code{exit}
3139 (@pxref{Catch and Throw}). If you throw a value other than @code{t},
3140 then @code{recursive-edit} returns normally to the function that called
3141 it. The command @kbd{C-M-c} (@code{exit-recursive-edit}) does this.
3142 Throwing a @code{t} value causes @code{recursive-edit} to quit, so that
3143 control returns to the command loop one level up. This is called
3144 @dfn{aborting}, and is done by @kbd{C-]} (@code{abort-recursive-edit}).
3145
3146 Most applications should not use recursive editing, except as part of
3147 using the minibuffer. Usually it is more convenient for the user if you
3148 change the major mode of the current buffer temporarily to a special
3149 major mode, which should have a command to go back to the previous mode.
3150 (The @kbd{e} command in Rmail uses this technique.) Or, if you wish to
3151 give the user different text to edit ``recursively,'' create and select
3152 a new buffer in a special mode. In this mode, define a command to
3153 complete the processing and go back to the previous buffer. (The
3154 @kbd{m} command in Rmail does this.)
3155
3156 Recursive edits are useful in debugging. You can insert a call to
3157 @code{debug} into a function definition as a sort of breakpoint, so that
3158 you can look around when the function gets there. @code{debug} invokes
3159 a recursive edit but also provides the other features of the debugger.
3160
3161 Recursive editing levels are also used when you type @kbd{C-r} in
3162 @code{query-replace} or use @kbd{C-x q} (@code{kbd-macro-query}).
3163
3164 @defun recursive-edit
3165 @cindex suspend evaluation
3166 This function invokes the editor command loop. It is called
3167 automatically by the initialization of Emacs, to let the user begin
3168 editing. When called from a Lisp program, it enters a recursive editing
3169 level.
3170
3171 If the current buffer is not the same as the selected window's buffer,
3172 @code{recursive-edit} saves and restores the current buffer. Otherwise,
3173 if you switch buffers, the buffer you switched to is current after
3174 @code{recursive-edit} returns.
3175
3176 In the following example, the function @code{simple-rec} first
3177 advances point one word, then enters a recursive edit, printing out a
3178 message in the echo area. The user can then do any editing desired, and
3179 then type @kbd{C-M-c} to exit and continue executing @code{simple-rec}.
3180
3181 @example
3182 (defun simple-rec ()
3183 (forward-word 1)
3184 (message "Recursive edit in progress")
3185 (recursive-edit)
3186 (forward-word 1))
3187 @result{} simple-rec
3188 (simple-rec)
3189 @result{} nil
3190 @end example
3191 @end defun
3192
3193 @deffn Command exit-recursive-edit
3194 This function exits from the innermost recursive edit (including
3195 minibuffer input). Its definition is effectively @code{(throw 'exit
3196 nil)}.
3197 @end deffn
3198
3199 @deffn Command abort-recursive-edit
3200 This function aborts the command that requested the innermost recursive
3201 edit (including minibuffer input), by signaling @code{quit}
3202 after exiting the recursive edit. Its definition is effectively
3203 @code{(throw 'exit t)}. @xref{Quitting}.
3204 @end deffn
3205
3206 @deffn Command top-level
3207 This function exits all recursive editing levels; it does not return a
3208 value, as it jumps completely out of any computation directly back to
3209 the main command loop.
3210 @end deffn
3211
3212 @defun recursion-depth
3213 This function returns the current depth of recursive edits. When no
3214 recursive edit is active, it returns 0.
3215 @end defun
3216
3217 @node Disabling Commands
3218 @section Disabling Commands
3219 @cindex disabled command
3220
3221 @dfn{Disabling a command} marks the command as requiring user
3222 confirmation before it can be executed. Disabling is used for commands
3223 which might be confusing to beginning users, to prevent them from using
3224 the commands by accident.
3225
3226 @kindex disabled
3227 The low-level mechanism for disabling a command is to put a
3228 non-@code{nil} @code{disabled} property on the Lisp symbol for the
3229 command. These properties are normally set up by the user's
3230 init file (@pxref{Init File}) with Lisp expressions such as this:
3231
3232 @example
3233 (put 'upcase-region 'disabled t)
3234 @end example
3235
3236 @noindent
3237 For a few commands, these properties are present by default (you can
3238 remove them in your init file if you wish).
3239
3240 If the value of the @code{disabled} property is a string, the message
3241 saying the command is disabled includes that string. For example:
3242
3243 @example
3244 (put 'delete-region 'disabled
3245 "Text deleted this way cannot be yanked back!\n")
3246 @end example
3247
3248 @xref{Disabling,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}, for the details on
3249 what happens when a disabled command is invoked interactively.
3250 Disabling a command has no effect on calling it as a function from Lisp
3251 programs.
3252
3253 @deffn Command enable-command command
3254 Allow @var{command} (a symbol) to be executed without special
3255 confirmation from now on, and alter the user's init file (@pxref{Init
3256 File}) so that this will apply to future sessions.
3257 @end deffn
3258
3259 @deffn Command disable-command command
3260 Require special confirmation to execute @var{command} from now on, and
3261 alter the user's init file so that this will apply to future sessions.
3262 @end deffn
3263
3264 @defvar disabled-command-function
3265 The value of this variable should be a function. When the user
3266 invokes a disabled command interactively, this function is called
3267 instead of the disabled command. It can use @code{this-command-keys}
3268 to determine what the user typed to run the command, and thus find the
3269 command itself.
3270
3271 The value may also be @code{nil}. Then all commands work normally,
3272 even disabled ones.
3273
3274 By default, the value is a function that asks the user whether to
3275 proceed.
3276 @end defvar
3277
3278 @node Command History
3279 @section Command History
3280 @cindex command history
3281 @cindex complex command
3282 @cindex history of commands
3283
3284 The command loop keeps a history of the complex commands that have
3285 been executed, to make it convenient to repeat these commands. A
3286 @dfn{complex command} is one for which the interactive argument reading
3287 uses the minibuffer. This includes any @kbd{M-x} command, any
3288 @kbd{M-:} command, and any command whose @code{interactive}
3289 specification reads an argument from the minibuffer. Explicit use of
3290 the minibuffer during the execution of the command itself does not cause
3291 the command to be considered complex.
3292
3293 @defvar command-history
3294 This variable's value is a list of recent complex commands, each
3295 represented as a form to evaluate. It continues to accumulate all
3296 complex commands for the duration of the editing session, but when it
3297 reaches the maximum size (@pxref{Minibuffer History}), the oldest
3298 elements are deleted as new ones are added.
3299
3300 @example
3301 @group
3302 command-history
3303 @result{} ((switch-to-buffer "chistory.texi")
3304 (describe-key "^X^[")
3305 (visit-tags-table "~/emacs/src/")
3306 (find-tag "repeat-complex-command"))
3307 @end group
3308 @end example
3309 @end defvar
3310
3311 This history list is actually a special case of minibuffer history
3312 (@pxref{Minibuffer History}), with one special twist: the elements are
3313 expressions rather than strings.
3314
3315 There are a number of commands devoted to the editing and recall of
3316 previous commands. The commands @code{repeat-complex-command}, and
3317 @code{list-command-history} are described in the user manual
3318 (@pxref{Repetition,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}). Within the
3319 minibuffer, the usual minibuffer history commands are available.
3320
3321 @node Keyboard Macros
3322 @section Keyboard Macros
3323 @cindex keyboard macros
3324
3325 A @dfn{keyboard macro} is a canned sequence of input events that can
3326 be considered a command and made the definition of a key. The Lisp
3327 representation of a keyboard macro is a string or vector containing the
3328 events. Don't confuse keyboard macros with Lisp macros
3329 (@pxref{Macros}).
3330
3331 @defun execute-kbd-macro kbdmacro &optional count loopfunc
3332 This function executes @var{kbdmacro} as a sequence of events. If
3333 @var{kbdmacro} is a string or vector, then the events in it are executed
3334 exactly as if they had been input by the user. The sequence is
3335 @emph{not} expected to be a single key sequence; normally a keyboard
3336 macro definition consists of several key sequences concatenated.
3337
3338 If @var{kbdmacro} is a symbol, then its function definition is used in
3339 place of @var{kbdmacro}. If that is another symbol, this process repeats.
3340 Eventually the result should be a string or vector. If the result is
3341 not a symbol, string, or vector, an error is signaled.
3342
3343 The argument @var{count} is a repeat count; @var{kbdmacro} is executed that
3344 many times. If @var{count} is omitted or @code{nil}, @var{kbdmacro} is
3345 executed once. If it is 0, @var{kbdmacro} is executed over and over until it
3346 encounters an error or a failing search.
3347
3348 If @var{loopfunc} is non-@code{nil}, it is a function that is called,
3349 without arguments, prior to each iteration of the macro. If
3350 @var{loopfunc} returns @code{nil}, then this stops execution of the macro.
3351
3352 @xref{Reading One Event}, for an example of using @code{execute-kbd-macro}.
3353 @end defun
3354
3355 @defvar executing-kbd-macro
3356 This variable contains the string or vector that defines the keyboard
3357 macro that is currently executing. It is @code{nil} if no macro is
3358 currently executing. A command can test this variable so as to behave
3359 differently when run from an executing macro. Do not set this variable
3360 yourself.
3361 @end defvar
3362
3363 @defvar defining-kbd-macro
3364 This variable is non-@code{nil} if and only if a keyboard macro is
3365 being defined. A command can test this variable so as to behave
3366 differently while a macro is being defined. The value is
3367 @code{append} while appending to the definition of an existing macro.
3368 The commands @code{start-kbd-macro}, @code{kmacro-start-macro} and
3369 @code{end-kbd-macro} set this variable---do not set it yourself.
3370
3371 The variable is always local to the current terminal and cannot be
3372 buffer-local. @xref{Multiple Terminals}.
3373 @end defvar
3374
3375 @defvar last-kbd-macro
3376 This variable is the definition of the most recently defined keyboard
3377 macro. Its value is a string or vector, or @code{nil}.
3378
3379 The variable is always local to the current terminal and cannot be
3380 buffer-local. @xref{Multiple Terminals}.
3381 @end defvar
3382
3383 @defvar kbd-macro-termination-hook
3384 This normal hook (@pxref{Standard Hooks}) is run when a keyboard
3385 macro terminates, regardless of what caused it to terminate (reaching
3386 the macro end or an error which ended the macro prematurely).
3387 @end defvar