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1 @c -*-texinfo-*-
2 @c This is part of the GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.
3 @c Copyright (C) 1990-1995, 1998-1999, 2001-2012 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4 @c See the file elisp.texi for copying conditions.
5 @setfilename ../../info/modes
6 @node Modes, Documentation, Keymaps, Top
7 @chapter Major and Minor Modes
8 @cindex mode
9
10 A @dfn{mode} is a set of definitions that customize Emacs and can be
11 turned on and off while you edit. There are two varieties of modes:
12 @dfn{major modes}, which are mutually exclusive and used for editing
13 particular kinds of text, and @dfn{minor modes}, which provide features
14 that users can enable individually.
15
16 This chapter describes how to write both major and minor modes, how to
17 indicate them in the mode line, and how they run hooks supplied by the
18 user. For related topics such as keymaps and syntax tables, see
19 @ref{Keymaps}, and @ref{Syntax Tables}.
20
21 @menu
22 * Hooks:: How to use hooks; how to write code that provides hooks.
23 * Major Modes:: Defining major modes.
24 * Minor Modes:: Defining minor modes.
25 * Mode Line Format:: Customizing the text that appears in the mode line.
26 * Imenu:: Providing a menu of definitions made in a buffer.
27 * Font Lock Mode:: How modes can highlight text according to syntax.
28 * Auto-Indentation:: How to teach Emacs to indent for a major mode.
29 * Desktop Save Mode:: How modes can have buffer state saved between
30 Emacs sessions.
31 @end menu
32
33 @node Hooks
34 @section Hooks
35 @cindex hooks
36
37 A @dfn{hook} is a variable where you can store a function or functions
38 to be called on a particular occasion by an existing program. Emacs
39 provides hooks for the sake of customization. Most often, hooks are set
40 up in the init file (@pxref{Init File}), but Lisp programs can set them also.
41 @xref{Standard Hooks}, for a list of standard hook variables.
42
43 @cindex normal hook
44 Most of the hooks in Emacs are @dfn{normal hooks}. These variables
45 contain lists of functions to be called with no arguments. By
46 convention, whenever the hook name ends in @samp{-hook}, that tells
47 you it is normal. We try to make all hooks normal, as much as
48 possible, so that you can use them in a uniform way.
49
50 Every major mode command is supposed to run a normal hook called the
51 @dfn{mode hook} as one of the last steps of initialization. This makes
52 it easy for a user to customize the behavior of the mode, by overriding
53 the buffer-local variable assignments already made by the mode. Most
54 minor mode functions also run a mode hook at the end. But hooks are
55 used in other contexts too. For example, the hook @code{suspend-hook}
56 runs just before Emacs suspends itself (@pxref{Suspending Emacs}).
57
58 The recommended way to add a hook function to a hook is by calling
59 @code{add-hook} (@pxref{Setting Hooks}). The hook functions may be any
60 of the valid kinds of functions that @code{funcall} accepts (@pxref{What
61 Is a Function}). Most normal hook variables are initially void;
62 @code{add-hook} knows how to deal with this. You can add hooks either
63 globally or buffer-locally with @code{add-hook}.
64
65 @cindex abnormal hook
66 If the hook variable's name does not end with @samp{-hook}, that
67 indicates it is probably an @dfn{abnormal hook}. That means the hook
68 functions are called with arguments, or their return values are used
69 in some way. The hook's documentation says how the functions are
70 called. You can use @code{add-hook} to add a function to an abnormal
71 hook, but you must write the function to follow the hook's calling
72 convention.
73
74 By convention, abnormal hook names end in @samp{-functions} or
75 @samp{-hooks}. If the variable's name ends in @samp{-function}, then
76 its value is just a single function, not a list of functions.
77
78 @menu
79 * Running Hooks:: How to run a hook.
80 * Setting Hooks:: How to put functions on a hook, or remove them.
81 @end menu
82
83 @node Running Hooks
84 @subsection Running Hooks
85
86 In this section, we document the @code{run-hooks} function, which is
87 used to run a normal hook. We also document the functions for running
88 various kinds of abnormal hooks.
89
90 @defun run-hooks &rest hookvars
91 This function takes one or more normal hook variable names as
92 arguments, and runs each hook in turn. Each argument should be a
93 symbol that is a normal hook variable. These arguments are processed
94 in the order specified.
95
96 If a hook variable has a non-@code{nil} value, that value should be a
97 list of functions. @code{run-hooks} calls all the functions, one by
98 one, with no arguments.
99
100 The hook variable's value can also be a single function---either a
101 lambda expression or a symbol with a function definition---which
102 @code{run-hooks} calls. But this usage is obsolete.
103
104 If the hook variable is buffer-local, the buffer-local variable will
105 be used instead of the global variable. However, if the buffer-local
106 variable contains the element @code{t}, the global hook variable will
107 be run as well.
108 @end defun
109
110 @defun run-hook-with-args hook &rest args
111 This function runs an abnormal hook by calling all the hook functions in
112 @var{hook}, passing each one the arguments @var{args}.
113 @end defun
114
115 @defun run-hook-with-args-until-failure hook &rest args
116 This function runs an abnormal hook by calling each hook function in
117 turn, stopping if one of them ``fails'' by returning @code{nil}. Each
118 hook function is passed the arguments @var{args}. If this function
119 stops because one of the hook functions fails, it returns @code{nil};
120 otherwise it returns a non-@code{nil} value.
121 @end defun
122
123 @defun run-hook-with-args-until-success hook &rest args
124 This function runs an abnormal hook by calling each hook function,
125 stopping if one of them ``succeeds'' by returning a non-@code{nil}
126 value. Each hook function is passed the arguments @var{args}. If this
127 function stops because one of the hook functions returns a
128 non-@code{nil} value, it returns that value; otherwise it returns
129 @code{nil}.
130 @end defun
131
132 @defmac with-wrapper-hook hook args &rest body
133 This macro runs the abnormal hook @code{hook} as a series of nested
134 ``wrapper functions'' around the @var{body} forms. The effect is
135 similar to nested @code{around} advices (@pxref{Around-Advice}).
136
137 Each hook function should accept an argument list consisting of a function
138 @var{fun}, followed by the additional arguments listed in @var{args}.
139 The first hook function is passed a function @var{fun} that, if it is
140 called with arguments @var{args}, performs @var{body} (i.e., the default
141 operation). The @var{fun} passed to each successive hook function is
142 constructed from all the preceding hook functions (and @var{body}); if
143 this @var{fun} is called with arguments @var{args}, it does what the
144 @code{with-wrapper-hook} call would if the preceding hook functions were
145 the only ones in @var{hook}.
146
147 Each hook function may call its @var{fun} argument as many times as it
148 wishes, including never. In that case, such a hook function acts to
149 replace the default definition altogether, and any preceding hook
150 functions. Of course, a subsequent hook function may do the same thing.
151
152 Each hook function definition is used to construct the @var{fun} passed
153 to the next hook function in @var{hook}, if any. The last or
154 ``outermost'' @var{fun} is called once to produce the overall effect.
155
156 When might you want to use a wrapper hook? The function
157 @code{filter-buffer-substring} illustrates a common case. There is a
158 basic functionality, performed by @var{body}---in this case, to extract
159 a buffer-substring. Then any number of hook functions can act in
160 sequence to modify that string, before returning the final result.
161 A wrapper-hook also allows for a hook function to completely replace the
162 default definition (by not calling @var{fun}).
163 @end defmac
164
165 @defun run-hook-wrapped hook wrap-function &rest args
166 This function is similar to @code{run-hook-with-args-until-success}.
167 Like that function, it runs the functions on the abnormal hook
168 @code{hook}, stopping at the first one that returns non-@code{nil}.
169 Instead of calling the hook functions directly, though, it actually
170 calls @code{wrap-function} with arguments @code{fun} and @code{args}.
171 @end defun
172
173 @node Setting Hooks
174 @subsection Setting Hooks
175
176 Here's an example that uses a mode hook to turn on Auto Fill mode when
177 in Lisp Interaction mode:
178
179 @example
180 (add-hook 'lisp-interaction-mode-hook 'auto-fill-mode)
181 @end example
182
183 @defun add-hook hook function &optional append local
184 This function is the handy way to add function @var{function} to hook
185 variable @var{hook}. You can use it for abnormal hooks as well as for
186 normal hooks. @var{function} can be any Lisp function that can accept
187 the proper number of arguments for @var{hook}. For example,
188
189 @example
190 (add-hook 'text-mode-hook 'my-text-hook-function)
191 @end example
192
193 @noindent
194 adds @code{my-text-hook-function} to the hook called @code{text-mode-hook}.
195
196 If @var{function} is already present in @var{hook} (comparing using
197 @code{equal}), then @code{add-hook} does not add it a second time.
198
199 If @var{function} has a non-@code{nil} property
200 @code{permanent-local-hook}, then @code{kill-all-local-variables} (or
201 changing major modes) won't delete it from the hook variable's local
202 value.
203
204 For a normal hook, hook functions should be designed so that the order
205 in which they are executed does not matter. Any dependence on the order
206 is asking for trouble. However, the order is predictable: normally,
207 @var{function} goes at the front of the hook list, so it is executed
208 first (barring another @code{add-hook} call). If the optional argument
209 @var{append} is non-@code{nil}, the new hook function goes at the end of
210 the hook list and is executed last.
211
212 @code{add-hook} can handle the cases where @var{hook} is void or its
213 value is a single function; it sets or changes the value to a list of
214 functions.
215
216 If @var{local} is non-@code{nil}, that says to add @var{function} to the
217 buffer-local hook list instead of to the global hook list. This makes
218 the hook buffer-local and adds @code{t} to the buffer-local value. The
219 latter acts as a flag to run the hook functions in the default value as
220 well as in the local value.
221 @end defun
222
223 @defun remove-hook hook function &optional local
224 This function removes @var{function} from the hook variable
225 @var{hook}. It compares @var{function} with elements of @var{hook}
226 using @code{equal}, so it works for both symbols and lambda
227 expressions.
228
229 If @var{local} is non-@code{nil}, that says to remove @var{function}
230 from the buffer-local hook list instead of from the global hook list.
231 @end defun
232
233 @node Major Modes
234 @section Major Modes
235 @cindex major mode
236
237 @cindex major mode command
238 Major modes specialize Emacs for editing particular kinds of text.
239 Each buffer has one major mode at a time. Every major mode is
240 associated with a @dfn{major mode command}, whose name should end in
241 @samp{-mode}. This command takes care of switching to that mode in the
242 current buffer, by setting various buffer-local variables such as a
243 local keymap. @xref{Major Mode Conventions}.
244
245 The least specialized major mode is called @dfn{Fundamental mode},
246 which has no mode-specific definitions or variable settings.
247
248 @deffn Command fundamental-mode
249 This is the major mode command for Fundamental mode. Unlike other mode
250 commands, it does @emph{not} run any mode hooks (@pxref{Major Mode
251 Conventions}), since you are not supposed to customize this mode.
252 @end deffn
253
254 The easiest way to write a major mode is to use the macro
255 @code{define-derived-mode}, which sets up the new mode as a variant of
256 an existing major mode. @xref{Derived Modes}. We recommend using
257 @code{define-derived-mode} even if the new mode is not an obvious
258 derivative of another mode, as it automatically enforces many coding
259 conventions for you. @xref{Basic Major Modes}, for common modes to
260 derive from.
261
262 The standard GNU Emacs Lisp directory tree contains the code for
263 several major modes, in files such as @file{text-mode.el},
264 @file{texinfo.el}, @file{lisp-mode.el}, and @file{rmail.el}. You can
265 study these libraries to see how modes are written.
266
267 @defopt major-mode
268 The buffer-local value of this variable holds the symbol for the current
269 major mode. Its default value holds the default major mode for new
270 buffers. The standard default value is @code{fundamental-mode}.
271
272 If the default value is @code{nil}, then whenever Emacs creates a new
273 buffer via a command such as @kbd{C-x b} (@code{switch-to-buffer}), the
274 new buffer is put in the major mode of the previously current buffer.
275 As an exception, if the major mode of the previous buffer has a
276 @code{mode-class} symbol property with value @code{special}, the new
277 buffer is put in Fundamental mode (@pxref{Major Mode Conventions}).
278 @end defopt
279
280 @menu
281 * Major Mode Conventions:: Coding conventions for keymaps, etc.
282 * Auto Major Mode:: How Emacs chooses the major mode automatically.
283 * Mode Help:: Finding out how to use a mode.
284 * Derived Modes:: Defining a new major mode based on another major
285 mode.
286 * Basic Major Modes:: Modes that other modes are often derived from.
287 * Mode Hooks:: Hooks run at the end of major mode commands.
288 * Tabulated List Mode:: Parent mode for buffers containing tabulated data.
289 * Generic Modes:: Defining a simple major mode that supports
290 comment syntax and Font Lock mode.
291 * Example Major Modes:: Text mode and Lisp modes.
292 @end menu
293
294 @node Major Mode Conventions
295 @subsection Major Mode Conventions
296 @cindex major mode conventions
297 @cindex conventions for writing major modes
298
299 The code for every major mode should follow various coding
300 conventions, including conventions for local keymap and syntax table
301 initialization, function and variable names, and hooks.
302
303 If you use the @code{define-derived-mode} macro, it will take care of
304 many of these conventions automatically. @xref{Derived Modes}. Note
305 also that Fundamental mode is an exception to many of these conventions,
306 because it represents the default state of Emacs.
307
308 The following list of conventions is only partial. Each major mode
309 should aim for consistency in general with other Emacs major modes, as
310 this makes Emacs as a whole more coherent. It is impossible to list
311 here all the possible points where this issue might come up; if the
312 Emacs developers point out an area where your major mode deviates from
313 the usual conventions, please make it compatible.
314
315 @itemize @bullet
316 @item
317 Define a major mode command whose name ends in @samp{-mode}. When
318 called with no arguments, this command should switch to the new mode in
319 the current buffer by setting up the keymap, syntax table, and
320 buffer-local variables in an existing buffer. It should not change the
321 buffer's contents.
322
323 @item
324 Write a documentation string for this command that describes the special
325 commands available in this mode. @xref{Mode Help}.
326
327 The documentation string may include the special documentation
328 substrings, @samp{\[@var{command}]}, @samp{\@{@var{keymap}@}}, and
329 @samp{\<@var{keymap}>}, which allow the help display to adapt
330 automatically to the user's own key bindings. @xref{Keys in
331 Documentation}.
332
333 @item
334 The major mode command should start by calling
335 @code{kill-all-local-variables}. This runs the normal hook
336 @code{change-major-mode-hook}, then gets rid of the buffer-local
337 variables of the major mode previously in effect. @xref{Creating
338 Buffer-Local}.
339
340 @item
341 The major mode command should set the variable @code{major-mode} to the
342 major mode command symbol. This is how @code{describe-mode} discovers
343 which documentation to print.
344
345 @item
346 The major mode command should set the variable @code{mode-name} to the
347 ``pretty'' name of the mode, usually a string (but see @ref{Mode Line
348 Data}, for other possible forms). The name of the mode appears
349 in the mode line.
350
351 @item
352 @cindex functions in modes
353 Since all global names are in the same name space, all the global
354 variables, constants, and functions that are part of the mode should
355 have names that start with the major mode name (or with an abbreviation
356 of it if the name is long). @xref{Coding Conventions}.
357
358 @item
359 In a major mode for editing some kind of structured text, such as a
360 programming language, indentation of text according to structure is
361 probably useful. So the mode should set @code{indent-line-function}
362 to a suitable function, and probably customize other variables
363 for indentation. @xref{Auto-Indentation}.
364
365 @item
366 @cindex keymaps in modes
367 The major mode should usually have its own keymap, which is used as the
368 local keymap in all buffers in that mode. The major mode command should
369 call @code{use-local-map} to install this local map. @xref{Active
370 Keymaps}, for more information.
371
372 This keymap should be stored permanently in a global variable named
373 @code{@var{modename}-mode-map}. Normally the library that defines the
374 mode sets this variable.
375
376 @xref{Tips for Defining}, for advice about how to write the code to set
377 up the mode's keymap variable.
378
379 @item
380 The key sequences bound in a major mode keymap should usually start with
381 @kbd{C-c}, followed by a control character, a digit, or @kbd{@{},
382 @kbd{@}}, @kbd{<}, @kbd{>}, @kbd{:} or @kbd{;}. The other punctuation
383 characters are reserved for minor modes, and ordinary letters are
384 reserved for users.
385
386 A major mode can also rebind the keys @kbd{M-n}, @kbd{M-p} and
387 @kbd{M-s}. The bindings for @kbd{M-n} and @kbd{M-p} should normally
388 be some kind of ``moving forward and backward,'' but this does not
389 necessarily mean cursor motion.
390
391 It is legitimate for a major mode to rebind a standard key sequence if
392 it provides a command that does ``the same job'' in a way better
393 suited to the text this mode is used for. For example, a major mode
394 for editing a programming language might redefine @kbd{C-M-a} to
395 ``move to the beginning of a function'' in a way that works better for
396 that language.
397
398 It is also legitimate for a major mode to rebind a standard key
399 sequence whose standard meaning is rarely useful in that mode. For
400 instance, minibuffer modes rebind @kbd{M-r}, whose standard meaning is
401 rarely of any use in the minibuffer. Major modes such as Dired or
402 Rmail that do not allow self-insertion of text can reasonably redefine
403 letters and other printing characters as special commands.
404
405 @item
406 Major modes for editing text should not define @key{RET} to do
407 anything other than insert a newline. However, it is ok for
408 specialized modes for text that users don't directly edit, such as
409 Dired and Info modes, to redefine @key{RET} to do something entirely
410 different.
411
412 @item
413 Major modes should not alter options that are primarily a matter of user
414 preference, such as whether Auto-Fill mode is enabled. Leave this to
415 each user to decide. However, a major mode should customize other
416 variables so that Auto-Fill mode will work usefully @emph{if} the user
417 decides to use it.
418
419 @item
420 @cindex syntax tables in modes
421 The mode may have its own syntax table or may share one with other
422 related modes. If it has its own syntax table, it should store this in
423 a variable named @code{@var{modename}-mode-syntax-table}. @xref{Syntax
424 Tables}.
425
426 @item
427 If the mode handles a language that has a syntax for comments, it should
428 set the variables that define the comment syntax. @xref{Options for
429 Comments,, Options Controlling Comments, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}.
430
431 @item
432 @cindex abbrev tables in modes
433 The mode may have its own abbrev table or may share one with other
434 related modes. If it has its own abbrev table, it should store this
435 in a variable named @code{@var{modename}-mode-abbrev-table}. If the
436 major mode command defines any abbrevs itself, it should pass @code{t}
437 for the @var{system-flag} argument to @code{define-abbrev}.
438 @xref{Defining Abbrevs}.
439
440 @item
441 The mode should specify how to do highlighting for Font Lock mode, by
442 setting up a buffer-local value for the variable
443 @code{font-lock-defaults} (@pxref{Font Lock Mode}).
444
445 @item
446 Each face that the mode defines should, if possible, inherit from an
447 existing Emacs face. @xref{Basic Faces}, and @ref{Faces for Font Lock}.
448
449 @item
450 The mode should specify how Imenu should find the definitions or
451 sections of a buffer, by setting up a buffer-local value for the
452 variable @code{imenu-generic-expression}, for the two variables
453 @code{imenu-prev-index-position-function} and
454 @code{imenu-extract-index-name-function}, or for the variable
455 @code{imenu-create-index-function} (@pxref{Imenu}).
456
457 @item
458 The mode can specify a local value for
459 @code{eldoc-documentation-function} to tell ElDoc mode how to handle
460 this mode.
461
462 @item
463 The mode can specify how to complete various keywords by adding one or
464 more buffer-local entries to the special hook
465 @code{completion-at-point-functions}. @xref{Completion in Buffers}.
466
467 @item
468 @cindex buffer-local variables in modes
469 To make a buffer-local binding for an Emacs customization variable, use
470 @code{make-local-variable} in the major mode command, not
471 @code{make-variable-buffer-local}. The latter function would make the
472 variable local to every buffer in which it is subsequently set, which
473 would affect buffers that do not use this mode. It is undesirable for a
474 mode to have such global effects. @xref{Buffer-Local Variables}.
475
476 With rare exceptions, the only reasonable way to use
477 @code{make-variable-buffer-local} in a Lisp package is for a variable
478 which is used only within that package. Using it on a variable used by
479 other packages would interfere with them.
480
481 @item
482 @cindex mode hook
483 @cindex major mode hook
484 Each major mode should have a normal @dfn{mode hook} named
485 @code{@var{modename}-mode-hook}. The very last thing the major mode command
486 should do is to call @code{run-mode-hooks}. This runs the normal
487 hook @code{change-major-mode-after-body-hook}, the mode hook,
488 and then the normal hook @code{after-change-major-mode-hook}.
489 @xref{Mode Hooks}.
490
491 @item
492 The major mode command may start by calling some other major mode
493 command (called the @dfn{parent mode}) and then alter some of its
494 settings. A mode that does this is called a @dfn{derived mode}. The
495 recommended way to define one is to use the @code{define-derived-mode}
496 macro, but this is not required. Such a mode should call the parent
497 mode command inside a @code{delay-mode-hooks} form. (Using
498 @code{define-derived-mode} does this automatically.) @xref{Derived
499 Modes}, and @ref{Mode Hooks}.
500
501 @item
502 If something special should be done if the user switches a buffer from
503 this mode to any other major mode, this mode can set up a buffer-local
504 value for @code{change-major-mode-hook} (@pxref{Creating Buffer-Local}).
505
506 @item
507 If this mode is appropriate only for specially-prepared text produced by
508 the mode itself (rather than by the user typing at the keyboard or by an
509 external file), then the major mode command symbol should have a
510 property named @code{mode-class} with value @code{special}, put on as
511 follows:
512
513 @kindex mode-class @r{(property)}
514 @cindex @code{special} modes
515 @example
516 (put 'funny-mode 'mode-class 'special)
517 @end example
518
519 @noindent
520 This tells Emacs that new buffers created while the current buffer is in
521 Funny mode should not be put in Funny mode, even though the default
522 value of @code{major-mode} is @code{nil}. By default, the value of
523 @code{nil} for @code{major-mode} means to use the current buffer's major
524 mode when creating new buffers (@pxref{Auto Major Mode}), but with such
525 @code{special} modes, Fundamental mode is used instead. Modes such as
526 Dired, Rmail, and Buffer List use this feature.
527
528 The @code{define-derived-mode} macro automatically marks the derived
529 mode as special if the parent mode is special. Special mode is a
530 convenient parent for such modes to inherit from; @xref{Basic Major
531 Modes}.
532
533 @item
534 If you want to make the new mode the default for files with certain
535 recognizable names, add an element to @code{auto-mode-alist} to select
536 the mode for those file names (@pxref{Auto Major Mode}). If you
537 define the mode command to autoload, you should add this element in
538 the same file that calls @code{autoload}. If you use an autoload
539 cookie for the mode command, you can also use an autoload cookie for
540 the form that adds the element (@pxref{autoload cookie}). If you do
541 not autoload the mode command, it is sufficient to add the element in
542 the file that contains the mode definition.
543
544 @item
545 @cindex mode loading
546 The top-level forms in the file defining the mode should be written so
547 that they may be evaluated more than once without adverse consequences.
548 For instance, use @code{defvar} or @code{defcustom} to set mode-related
549 variables, so that they are not reinitialized if they already have a
550 value (@pxref{Defining Variables}).
551
552 @end itemize
553
554 @node Auto Major Mode
555 @subsection How Emacs Chooses a Major Mode
556 @cindex major mode, automatic selection
557
558 When Emacs visits a file, it automatically selects a major mode for
559 the buffer based on information in the file name or in the file itself.
560 It also processes local variables specified in the file text.
561
562 @deffn Command normal-mode &optional find-file
563 This function establishes the proper major mode and buffer-local variable
564 bindings for the current buffer. First it calls @code{set-auto-mode}
565 (see below), then it runs @code{hack-local-variables} to parse, and
566 bind or evaluate as appropriate, the file's local variables
567 (@pxref{File Local Variables}).
568
569 If the @var{find-file} argument to @code{normal-mode} is non-@code{nil},
570 @code{normal-mode} assumes that the @code{find-file} function is calling
571 it. In this case, it may process local variables in the @samp{-*-}
572 line or at the end of the file. The variable
573 @code{enable-local-variables} controls whether to do so. @xref{File
574 Variables, , Local Variables in Files, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual},
575 for the syntax of the local variables section of a file.
576
577 If you run @code{normal-mode} interactively, the argument
578 @var{find-file} is normally @code{nil}. In this case,
579 @code{normal-mode} unconditionally processes any file local variables.
580
581 The function calls @code{set-auto-mode} to choose a major mode. If this
582 does not specify a mode, the buffer stays in the major mode determined
583 by the default value of @code{major-mode} (see below).
584
585 @cindex file mode specification error
586 @code{normal-mode} uses @code{condition-case} around the call to the
587 major mode command, so errors are caught and reported as a @samp{File
588 mode specification error}, followed by the original error message.
589 @end deffn
590
591 @defun set-auto-mode &optional keep-mode-if-same
592 @cindex visited file mode
593 This function selects the major mode that is appropriate for the
594 current buffer. It bases its decision (in order of precedence) on the
595 @w{@samp{-*-}} line, on any @samp{mode:} local variable near the end of
596 a file, on the @w{@samp{#!}} line (using @code{interpreter-mode-alist}),
597 on the text at the beginning of the buffer (using
598 @code{magic-mode-alist}), and finally on the visited file name (using
599 @code{auto-mode-alist}). @xref{Choosing Modes, , How Major Modes are
600 Chosen, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}. If @code{enable-local-variables}
601 is @code{nil}, @code{set-auto-mode} does not check the @w{@samp{-*-}}
602 line, or near the end of the file, for any mode tag.
603
604 @vindex inhibit-local-variables-regexps
605 There are some file types where it is not appropriate to scan the file
606 contents for a mode specifier. For example, a tar archive may happen to
607 contain, near the end of the file, a member file that has a local
608 variables section specifying a mode for that particular file. This
609 should not be applied to the containing tar file. Similarly, a tiff
610 image file might just happen to contain a first line that seems to
611 match the @w{@samp{-*-}} pattern. For these reasons, both these file
612 extensions are members of the list @var{inhibit-local-variables-regexps}.
613 Add patterns to this list to prevent Emacs searching them for local
614 variables of any kind (not just mode specifiers).
615
616 If @var{keep-mode-if-same} is non-@code{nil}, this function does not
617 call the mode command if the buffer is already in the proper major
618 mode. For instance, @code{set-visited-file-name} sets this to
619 @code{t} to avoid killing buffer local variables that the user may
620 have set.
621 @end defun
622
623 @defun set-buffer-major-mode buffer
624 This function sets the major mode of @var{buffer} to the default value of
625 @code{major-mode}; if that is @code{nil}, it uses the
626 current buffer's major mode (if that is suitable). As an exception,
627 if @var{buffer}'s name is @samp{*scratch*}, it sets the mode to
628 @code{initial-major-mode}.
629
630 The low-level primitives for creating buffers do not use this function,
631 but medium-level commands such as @code{switch-to-buffer} and
632 @code{find-file-noselect} use it whenever they create buffers.
633 @end defun
634
635 @defopt initial-major-mode
636 @cindex @samp{*scratch*}
637 The value of this variable determines the major mode of the initial
638 @samp{*scratch*} buffer. The value should be a symbol that is a major
639 mode command. The default value is @code{lisp-interaction-mode}.
640 @end defopt
641
642 @defvar interpreter-mode-alist
643 This variable specifies major modes to use for scripts that specify a
644 command interpreter in a @samp{#!} line. Its value is an alist with
645 elements of the form @code{(@var{interpreter} . @var{mode})}; for
646 example, @code{("perl" . perl-mode)} is one element present by
647 default. The element says to use mode @var{mode} if the file
648 specifies an interpreter which matches @var{interpreter}.
649 @end defvar
650
651 @defvar magic-mode-alist
652 This variable's value is an alist with elements of the form
653 @code{(@var{regexp} . @var{function})}, where @var{regexp} is a
654 regular expression and @var{function} is a function or @code{nil}.
655 After visiting a file, @code{set-auto-mode} calls @var{function} if
656 the text at the beginning of the buffer matches @var{regexp} and
657 @var{function} is non-@code{nil}; if @var{function} is @code{nil},
658 @code{auto-mode-alist} gets to decide the mode.
659 @end defvar
660
661 @defvar magic-fallback-mode-alist
662 This works like @code{magic-mode-alist}, except that it is handled
663 only if @code{auto-mode-alist} does not specify a mode for this file.
664 @end defvar
665
666 @defvar auto-mode-alist
667 This variable contains an association list of file name patterns
668 (regular expressions) and corresponding major mode commands. Usually,
669 the file name patterns test for suffixes, such as @samp{.el} and
670 @samp{.c}, but this need not be the case. An ordinary element of the
671 alist looks like @code{(@var{regexp} . @var{mode-function})}.
672
673 For example,
674
675 @smallexample
676 @group
677 (("\\`/tmp/fol/" . text-mode)
678 ("\\.texinfo\\'" . texinfo-mode)
679 ("\\.texi\\'" . texinfo-mode)
680 @end group
681 @group
682 ("\\.el\\'" . emacs-lisp-mode)
683 ("\\.c\\'" . c-mode)
684 ("\\.h\\'" . c-mode)
685 @dots{})
686 @end group
687 @end smallexample
688
689 When you visit a file whose expanded file name (@pxref{File Name
690 Expansion}), with version numbers and backup suffixes removed using
691 @code{file-name-sans-versions} (@pxref{File Name Components}), matches
692 a @var{regexp}, @code{set-auto-mode} calls the corresponding
693 @var{mode-function}. This feature enables Emacs to select the proper
694 major mode for most files.
695
696 If an element of @code{auto-mode-alist} has the form @code{(@var{regexp}
697 @var{function} t)}, then after calling @var{function}, Emacs searches
698 @code{auto-mode-alist} again for a match against the portion of the file
699 name that did not match before. This feature is useful for
700 uncompression packages: an entry of the form @code{("\\.gz\\'"
701 @var{function} t)} can uncompress the file and then put the uncompressed
702 file in the proper mode according to the name sans @samp{.gz}.
703
704 Here is an example of how to prepend several pattern pairs to
705 @code{auto-mode-alist}. (You might use this sort of expression in your
706 init file.)
707
708 @smallexample
709 @group
710 (setq auto-mode-alist
711 (append
712 ;; @r{File name (within directory) starts with a dot.}
713 '(("/\\.[^/]*\\'" . fundamental-mode)
714 ;; @r{File name has no dot.}
715 ("/[^\\./]*\\'" . fundamental-mode)
716 ;; @r{File name ends in @samp{.C}.}
717 ("\\.C\\'" . c++-mode))
718 auto-mode-alist))
719 @end group
720 @end smallexample
721 @end defvar
722
723 @node Mode Help
724 @subsection Getting Help about a Major Mode
725 @cindex mode help
726 @cindex help for major mode
727 @cindex documentation for major mode
728
729 The @code{describe-mode} function provides information about major
730 modes. It is normally bound to @kbd{C-h m}. It uses the value of the
731 variable @code{major-mode} (@pxref{Major Modes}), which is why every
732 major mode command needs to set that variable.
733
734 @deffn Command describe-mode
735 This function displays the documentation of the current major mode.
736
737 The @code{describe-mode} function calls the @code{documentation}
738 function using the value of @code{major-mode} as an argument. Thus, it
739 displays the documentation string of the major mode command.
740 (@xref{Accessing Documentation}.)
741 @end deffn
742
743 @node Derived Modes
744 @subsection Defining Derived Modes
745 @cindex derived mode
746
747 The recommended way to define a new major mode is to derive it from an
748 existing one using @code{define-derived-mode}. If there is no closely
749 related mode, you should inherit from either @code{text-mode},
750 @code{special-mode}, or @code{prog-mode}. @xref{Basic Major Modes}. If
751 none of these are suitable, you can inherit from @code{fundamental-mode}
752 (@pxref{Major Modes}).
753
754 @defmac define-derived-mode variant parent name docstring keyword-args@dots{} body@dots{}
755 This macro defines @var{variant} as a major mode command, using
756 @var{name} as the string form of the mode name. @var{variant} and
757 @var{parent} should be unquoted symbols.
758
759 The new command @var{variant} is defined to call the function
760 @var{parent}, then override certain aspects of that parent mode:
761
762 @itemize @bullet
763 @item
764 The new mode has its own sparse keymap, named
765 @code{@var{variant}-map}. @code{define-derived-mode}
766 makes the parent mode's keymap the parent of the new map, unless
767 @code{@var{variant}-map} is already set and already has a parent.
768
769 @item
770 The new mode has its own syntax table, kept in the variable
771 @code{@var{variant}-syntax-table}, unless you override this using the
772 @code{:syntax-table} keyword (see below). @code{define-derived-mode}
773 makes the parent mode's syntax-table the parent of
774 @code{@var{variant}-syntax-table}, unless the latter is already set
775 and already has a parent different from the standard syntax table.
776
777 @item
778 The new mode has its own abbrev table, kept in the variable
779 @code{@var{variant}-abbrev-table}, unless you override this using the
780 @code{:abbrev-table} keyword (see below).
781
782 @item
783 The new mode has its own mode hook, @code{@var{variant}-hook}. It
784 runs this hook, after running the hooks of its ancestor modes, with
785 @code{run-mode-hooks}, as the last thing it does. @xref{Mode Hooks}.
786 @end itemize
787
788 In addition, you can specify how to override other aspects of
789 @var{parent} with @var{body}. The command @var{variant}
790 evaluates the forms in @var{body} after setting up all its usual
791 overrides, just before running the mode hooks.
792
793 If @var{parent} has a non-@code{nil} @code{mode-class} symbol
794 property, then @code{define-derived-mode} sets the @code{mode-class}
795 property of @var{variant} to the same value. This ensures, for
796 example, that if @var{parent} is a special mode, then @var{variant} is
797 also a special mode (@pxref{Major Mode Conventions}).
798
799 You can also specify @code{nil} for @var{parent}. This gives the new
800 mode no parent. Then @code{define-derived-mode} behaves as described
801 above, but, of course, omits all actions connected with @var{parent}.
802
803 The argument @var{docstring} specifies the documentation string for the
804 new mode. @code{define-derived-mode} adds some general information
805 about the mode's hook, followed by the mode's keymap, at the end of this
806 documentation string. If you omit @var{docstring},
807 @code{define-derived-mode} generates a documentation string.
808
809 The @var{keyword-args} are pairs of keywords and values. The values
810 are evaluated. The following keywords are currently supported:
811
812 @table @code
813 @item :syntax-table
814 You can use this to explicitly specify a syntax table for the new
815 mode. If you specify a @code{nil} value, the new mode uses the same
816 syntax table as @var{parent}, or the standard syntax table if
817 @var{parent} is @code{nil}. (Note that this does @emph{not} follow
818 the convention used for non-keyword arguments that a @code{nil} value
819 is equivalent with not specifying the argument.)
820
821 @item :abbrev-table
822 You can use this to explicitly specify an abbrev table for the new
823 mode. If you specify a @code{nil} value, the new mode uses the same
824 abbrev table as @var{parent}, or @code{fundamental-mode-abbrev-table}
825 if @var{parent} is @code{nil}. (Again, a @code{nil} value is
826 @emph{not} equivalent to not specifying this keyword.)
827
828 @item :group
829 If this is specified, the value should be the customization group for
830 this mode. (Not all major modes have one.) Only the (still
831 experimental and unadvertised) command @code{customize-mode} currently
832 uses this. @code{define-derived-mode} does @emph{not} automatically
833 define the specified customization group.
834 @end table
835
836 Here is a hypothetical example:
837
838 @example
839 (define-derived-mode hypertext-mode
840 text-mode "Hypertext"
841 "Major mode for hypertext.
842 \\@{hypertext-mode-map@}"
843 (setq case-fold-search nil))
844
845 (define-key hypertext-mode-map
846 [down-mouse-3] 'do-hyper-link)
847 @end example
848
849 Do not write an @code{interactive} spec in the definition;
850 @code{define-derived-mode} does that automatically.
851 @end defmac
852
853 @defun derived-mode-p &rest modes
854 This function returns non-@code{nil} if the current major mode is
855 derived from any of the major modes given by the symbols @var{modes}.
856 @end defun
857
858 @node Basic Major Modes
859 @subsection Basic Major Modes
860
861 Apart from Fundamental mode, there are three major modes that other
862 major modes commonly derive from: Text mode, Prog mode, and Special
863 mode. While Text mode is useful in its own right (e.g. for editing
864 files ending in @file{.txt}), Prog mode and Special mode exist mainly to
865 let other modes derive from them.
866
867 @vindex prog-mode-hook
868 As far as possible, new major modes should be derived, either directly
869 or indirectly, from one of these three modes. One reason is that this
870 allows users to customize a single mode hook
871 (e.g. @code{prog-mode-hook}) for an entire family of relevant modes
872 (e.g. all programming language modes).
873
874 @deffn Command text-mode
875 Text mode is a major mode for editing human languages. It defines the
876 @samp{"} and @samp{\} characters as having punctuation syntax
877 (@pxref{Syntax Class Table}), and binds @kbd{M-@key{TAB}} to
878 @code{ispell-complete-word} (@pxref{Spelling,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs
879 Manual}).
880
881 An example of a major mode derived from Text mode is HTML mode.
882 @xref{HTML Mode,,SGML and HTML Modes, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}.
883 @end deffn
884
885 @deffn Command prog-mode
886 Prog mode is a basic major mode for buffers containing programming
887 language source code. Most of the programming language major modes
888 built into Emacs are derived from it.
889
890 Prog mode binds @code{parse-sexp-ignore-comments} to @code{t}
891 (@pxref{Motion via Parsing}) and @code{bidi-paragraph-direction} to
892 @code{left-to-right} (@pxref{Bidirectional Display}).
893 @end deffn
894
895 @deffn Command special-mode
896 Special mode is a basic major mode for buffers containing text that is
897 produced specially by Emacs, rather than directly from a file. Major
898 modes derived from Special mode are given a @code{mode-class} property
899 of @code{special} (@pxref{Major Mode Conventions}).
900
901 Special mode sets the buffer to read-only. Its keymap defines several
902 common bindings, including @kbd{q} for @code{quit-window}, @kbd{z} for
903 @code{kill-this-buffer}, and @kbd{g} for @code{revert-buffer}
904 (@pxref{Reverting}).
905
906 An example of a major mode derived from Special mode is Buffer Menu
907 mode, which is used by the @samp{*Buffer List*} buffer. @xref{List
908 Buffers,,Listing Existing Buffers, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}.
909 @end deffn
910
911 In addition, modes for buffers of tabulated data can inherit from
912 Tabulated List mode, which is in turn derived from Special mode.
913 @xref{Tabulated List Mode}.
914
915 @node Mode Hooks
916 @subsection Mode Hooks
917
918 Every major mode command should finish by running the mode-independent
919 normal hook @code{change-major-mode-after-body-hook}, its mode hook,
920 and the normal hook @code{after-change-major-mode-hook}.
921 It does this by calling @code{run-mode-hooks}. If the major mode is a
922 derived mode, that is if it calls another major mode (the parent mode)
923 in its body, it should do this inside @code{delay-mode-hooks} so that
924 the parent won't run these hooks itself. Instead, the derived mode's
925 call to @code{run-mode-hooks} runs the parent's mode hook too.
926 @xref{Major Mode Conventions}.
927
928 Emacs versions before Emacs 22 did not have @code{delay-mode-hooks}.
929 Versions before 24 did not have @code{change-major-mode-after-body-hook}.
930 When user-implemented major modes do not use @code{run-mode-hooks} and
931 have not been updated to use these newer features, they won't entirely
932 follow these conventions: they may run the parent's mode hook too early,
933 or fail to run @code{after-change-major-mode-hook}. If you encounter
934 such a major mode, please correct it to follow these conventions.
935
936 When you defined a major mode using @code{define-derived-mode}, it
937 automatically makes sure these conventions are followed. If you
938 define a major mode ``by hand,'' not using @code{define-derived-mode},
939 use the following functions to handle these conventions automatically.
940
941 @defun run-mode-hooks &rest hookvars
942 Major modes should run their mode hook using this function. It is
943 similar to @code{run-hooks} (@pxref{Hooks}), but it also runs
944 @code{change-major-mode-after-body-hook} and
945 @code{after-change-major-mode-hook}.
946
947 When this function is called during the execution of a
948 @code{delay-mode-hooks} form, it does not run the hooks immediately.
949 Instead, it arranges for the next call to @code{run-mode-hooks} to run
950 them.
951 @end defun
952
953 @defmac delay-mode-hooks body@dots{}
954 When one major mode command calls another, it should do so inside of
955 @code{delay-mode-hooks}.
956
957 This macro executes @var{body}, but tells all @code{run-mode-hooks}
958 calls during the execution of @var{body} to delay running their hooks.
959 The hooks will actually run during the next call to
960 @code{run-mode-hooks} after the end of the @code{delay-mode-hooks}
961 construct.
962 @end defmac
963
964 @defvar change-major-mode-after-body-hook
965 This is a normal hook run by @code{run-mode-hooks}. It is run before
966 the mode hooks.
967 @end defvar
968
969 @defvar after-change-major-mode-hook
970 This is a normal hook run by @code{run-mode-hooks}. It is run at the
971 very end of every properly-written major mode command.
972 @end defvar
973
974 @node Tabulated List Mode
975 @subsection Tabulated List mode
976 @cindex Tabulated List mode
977
978 Tabulated List mode is a major mode for displaying tabulated data,
979 i.e.@: data consisting of @dfn{entries}, each entry occupying one row of
980 text with its contents divided into columns. Tabulated List mode
981 provides facilities for pretty-printing rows and columns, and sorting
982 the rows according to the values in each column. It is derived from
983 Special mode (@pxref{Basic Major Modes}).
984
985 Tabulated List mode is intended to be used as a parent mode by a more
986 specialized major mode. Examples include Process Menu mode
987 (@pxref{Process Information}) and Package Menu mode (@pxref{Package
988 Menu,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}).
989
990 @findex tabulated-list-mode
991 Such a derived mode should use @code{define-derived-mode} in the usual
992 way, specifying @code{tabulated-list-mode} as the second argument
993 (@pxref{Derived Modes}). The body of the @code{define-derived-mode}
994 form should specify the format of the tabulated data, by assigning
995 values to the variables documented below; then, it should call the
996 function @code{tabulated-list-init-header} to initialize the header
997 line.
998
999 The derived mode should also define a @dfn{listing command}. This,
1000 not the mode command, is what the user calls (e.g.@: @kbd{M-x
1001 list-processes}). The listing command should create or switch to a
1002 buffer, turn on the derived mode, specify the tabulated data, and
1003 finally call @code{tabulated-list-print} to populate the buffer.
1004
1005 @defvar tabulated-list-format
1006 This buffer-local variable specifies the format of the Tabulated List
1007 data. Its value should be a vector. Each element of the vector
1008 represents a data column, and should be a list @code{(@var{name}
1009 @var{width} @var{sort})}, where
1010
1011 @itemize
1012 @item
1013 @var{name} is the column's name (a string).
1014
1015 @item
1016 @var{width} is the width to reserve for the column (an integer). This
1017 is meaningless for the last column, which runs to the end of each line.
1018
1019 @item
1020 @var{sort} specifies how to sort entries by the column. If @code{nil},
1021 the column cannot be used for sorting. If @code{t}, the column is
1022 sorted by comparing string values. Otherwise, this should be a
1023 predicate function for @code{sort} (@pxref{Rearrangement}), which
1024 accepts two arguments with the same form as the elements of
1025 @code{tabulated-list-entries} (see below).
1026 @end itemize
1027 @end defvar
1028
1029 @defvar tabulated-list-entries
1030 This buffer-local variable specifies the entries displayed in the
1031 Tabulated List buffer. Its value should be either a list, or a
1032 function.
1033
1034 If the value is a list, each list element corresponds to one entry, and
1035 should have the form @w{@code{(@var{id} @var{contents})}}, where
1036
1037 @itemize
1038 @item
1039 @var{id} is either @code{nil}, or a Lisp object that identifies the
1040 entry. If the latter, the cursor stays on the ``same'' entry when
1041 re-sorting entries. Comparison is done with @code{equal}.
1042
1043 @item
1044 @var{contents} is a vector with the same number of elements as
1045 @code{tabulated-list-format}. Each vector element is either a string,
1046 which is inserted into the buffer as-is, or a list @code{(@var{label}
1047 . @var{properties})}, which means to insert a text button by calling
1048 @code{insert-text-button} with @var{label} and @var{properties} as
1049 arguments (@pxref{Making Buttons}).
1050
1051 There should be no newlines in any of these strings.
1052 @end itemize
1053
1054 Otherwise, the value should be a function which returns a list of the
1055 above form when called with no arguments.
1056 @end defvar
1057
1058 @defvar tabulated-list-revert-hook
1059 This normal hook is run prior to reverting a Tabulated List buffer. A
1060 derived mode can add a function to this hook to recompute
1061 @code{tabulated-list-entries}.
1062 @end defvar
1063
1064 @defvar tabulated-list-printer
1065 The value of this variable is the function called to insert an entry at
1066 point, including its terminating newline. The function should accept
1067 two arguments, @var{id} and @var{contents}, having the same meanings as
1068 in @code{tabulated-list-entries}. The default value is a function which
1069 inserts an entry in a straightforward way; a mode which uses Tabulated
1070 List mode in a more complex way can specify another function.
1071 @end defvar
1072
1073 @defvar tabulated-list-sort-key
1074 The value of this variable specifies the current sort key for the
1075 Tabulated List buffer. If it is @code{nil}, no sorting is done.
1076 Otherwise, it should have the form @code{(@var{name} . @var{flip})},
1077 where @var{name} is a string matching one of the column names in
1078 @code{tabulated-list-format}, and @var{flip}, if non-@code{nil}, means
1079 to invert the sort order.
1080 @end defvar
1081
1082 @defun tabulated-list-init-header
1083 This function computes and sets @code{header-line-format} for the
1084 Tabulated List buffer (@pxref{Header Lines}), and assigns a keymap to
1085 the header line to allow sort entries by clicking on column headers.
1086
1087 Modes derived from Tabulated List mode should call this after setting
1088 the above variables (in particular, only after setting
1089 @code{tabulated-list-format}).
1090 @end defun
1091
1092 @defun tabulated-list-print &optional remember-pos
1093 This function populates the current buffer with entries. It should be
1094 called by the listing command. It erases the buffer, sorts the entries
1095 specified by @code{tabulated-list-entries} according to
1096 @code{tabulated-list-sort-key}, then calls the function specified by
1097 @code{tabulated-list-printer} to insert each entry.
1098
1099 If the optional argument @var{remember-pos} is non-@code{nil}, this
1100 function looks for the @var{id} element on the current line, if any, and
1101 tries to move to that entry after all the entries are (re)inserted.
1102 @end defun
1103
1104 @node Generic Modes
1105 @subsection Generic Modes
1106 @cindex generic mode
1107
1108 @dfn{Generic modes} are simple major modes with basic support for
1109 comment syntax and Font Lock mode. To define a generic mode, use the
1110 macro @code{define-generic-mode}. See the file @file{generic-x.el}
1111 for some examples of the use of @code{define-generic-mode}.
1112
1113 @defmac define-generic-mode mode comment-list keyword-list font-lock-list auto-mode-list function-list &optional docstring
1114 This macro defines a generic mode command named @var{mode} (a symbol,
1115 not quoted). The optional argument @var{docstring} is the
1116 documentation for the mode command. If you do not supply it,
1117 @code{define-generic-mode} generates one by default.
1118
1119 The argument @var{comment-list} is a list in which each element is
1120 either a character, a string of one or two characters, or a cons cell.
1121 A character or a string is set up in the mode's syntax table as a
1122 ``comment starter.'' If the entry is a cons cell, the @sc{car} is set
1123 up as a ``comment starter'' and the @sc{cdr} as a ``comment ender.''
1124 (Use @code{nil} for the latter if you want comments to end at the end
1125 of the line.) Note that the syntax table mechanism has limitations
1126 about what comment starters and enders are actually possible.
1127 @xref{Syntax Tables}.
1128
1129 The argument @var{keyword-list} is a list of keywords to highlight
1130 with @code{font-lock-keyword-face}. Each keyword should be a string.
1131 Meanwhile, @var{font-lock-list} is a list of additional expressions to
1132 highlight. Each element of this list should have the same form as an
1133 element of @code{font-lock-keywords}. @xref{Search-based
1134 Fontification}.
1135
1136 The argument @var{auto-mode-list} is a list of regular expressions to
1137 add to the variable @code{auto-mode-alist}. They are added by the execution
1138 of the @code{define-generic-mode} form, not by expanding the macro call.
1139
1140 Finally, @var{function-list} is a list of functions for the mode
1141 command to call for additional setup. It calls these functions just
1142 before it runs the mode hook variable @code{@var{mode}-hook}.
1143 @end defmac
1144
1145 @node Example Major Modes
1146 @subsection Major Mode Examples
1147
1148 Text mode is perhaps the simplest mode besides Fundamental mode.
1149 Here are excerpts from @file{text-mode.el} that illustrate many of
1150 the conventions listed above:
1151
1152 @smallexample
1153 @group
1154 ;; @r{Create the syntax table for this mode.}
1155 (defvar text-mode-syntax-table
1156 (let ((st (make-syntax-table)))
1157 (modify-syntax-entry ?\" ". " st)
1158 (modify-syntax-entry ?\\ ". " st)
1159 ;; Add `p' so M-c on `hello' leads to `Hello', not `hello'.
1160 (modify-syntax-entry ?' "w p" st)
1161 st)
1162 "Syntax table used while in `text-mode'.")
1163 @end group
1164
1165 ;; @r{Create the keymap for this mode.}
1166 @group
1167 (defvar text-mode-map
1168 (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap)))
1169 (define-key map "\e\t" 'ispell-complete-word)
1170 map)
1171 "Keymap for `text-mode'.
1172 Many other modes, such as `mail-mode', `outline-mode' and
1173 `indented-text-mode', inherit all the commands defined in this map.")
1174 @end group
1175 @end smallexample
1176
1177 Here is how the actual mode command is defined now:
1178
1179 @smallexample
1180 @group
1181 (define-derived-mode text-mode nil "Text"
1182 "Major mode for editing text written for humans to read.
1183 In this mode, paragraphs are delimited only by blank or white lines.
1184 You can thus get the full benefit of adaptive filling
1185 (see the variable `adaptive-fill-mode').
1186 \\@{text-mode-map@}
1187 Turning on Text mode runs the normal hook `text-mode-hook'."
1188 @end group
1189 @group
1190 (set (make-local-variable 'text-mode-variant) t)
1191 (set (make-local-variable 'require-final-newline)
1192 mode-require-final-newline)
1193 (set (make-local-variable 'indent-line-function) 'indent-relative))
1194 @end group
1195 @end smallexample
1196
1197 @noindent
1198 (The last line is redundant nowadays, since @code{indent-relative} is
1199 the default value, and we'll delete it in a future version.)
1200
1201 @cindex @file{lisp-mode.el}
1202 The three Lisp modes (Lisp mode, Emacs Lisp mode, and Lisp Interaction
1203 mode) have more features than Text mode and the code is correspondingly
1204 more complicated. Here are excerpts from @file{lisp-mode.el} that
1205 illustrate how these modes are written.
1206
1207 Here is how the Lisp mode syntax and abbrev tables are defined:
1208
1209 @cindex syntax table example
1210 @smallexample
1211 @group
1212 ;; @r{Create mode-specific table variables.}
1213 (defvar lisp-mode-abbrev-table nil)
1214 (define-abbrev-table 'lisp-mode-abbrev-table ())
1215
1216 (defvar lisp-mode-syntax-table
1217 (let ((table (copy-syntax-table emacs-lisp-mode-syntax-table)))
1218 (modify-syntax-entry ?\[ "_ " table)
1219 (modify-syntax-entry ?\] "_ " table)
1220 (modify-syntax-entry ?# "' 14" table)
1221 (modify-syntax-entry ?| "\" 23bn" table)
1222 table)
1223 "Syntax table used in `lisp-mode'.")
1224 @end group
1225 @end smallexample
1226
1227 The three modes for Lisp share much of their code. For instance,
1228 each calls the following function to set various variables:
1229
1230 @smallexample
1231 @group
1232 (defun lisp-mode-variables (&optional lisp-syntax keywords-case-insensitive)
1233 (when lisp-syntax
1234 (set-syntax-table lisp-mode-syntax-table))
1235 (setq local-abbrev-table lisp-mode-abbrev-table)
1236 @dots{}
1237 @end group
1238 @end smallexample
1239
1240 @noindent
1241 Amongst other things, this function sets up the @code{comment-start}
1242 variable to handle Lisp comments:
1243
1244 @smallexample
1245 @group
1246 (make-local-variable 'comment-start)
1247 (setq comment-start ";")
1248 @dots{}
1249 @end group
1250 @end smallexample
1251
1252 Each of the different Lisp modes has a slightly different keymap. For
1253 example, Lisp mode binds @kbd{C-c C-z} to @code{run-lisp}, but the other
1254 Lisp modes do not. However, all Lisp modes have some commands in
1255 common. The following code sets up the common commands:
1256
1257 @smallexample
1258 @group
1259 (defvar lisp-mode-shared-map
1260 (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap)))
1261 (define-key map "\e\C-q" 'indent-sexp)
1262 (define-key map "\177" 'backward-delete-char-untabify)
1263 map)
1264 "Keymap for commands shared by all sorts of Lisp modes.")
1265 @end group
1266 @end smallexample
1267
1268 @noindent
1269 And here is the code to set up the keymap for Lisp mode:
1270
1271 @smallexample
1272 @group
1273 (defvar lisp-mode-map
1274 (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap))
1275 (menu-map (make-sparse-keymap "Lisp")))
1276 (set-keymap-parent map lisp-mode-shared-map)
1277 (define-key map "\e\C-x" 'lisp-eval-defun)
1278 (define-key map "\C-c\C-z" 'run-lisp)
1279 @dots{}
1280 map)
1281 "Keymap for ordinary Lisp mode.
1282 All commands in `lisp-mode-shared-map' are inherited by this map.")
1283 @end group
1284 @end smallexample
1285
1286 @noindent
1287 Finally, here is the major mode command for Lisp mode:
1288
1289 @smallexample
1290 @group
1291 (define-derived-mode lisp-mode prog-mode "Lisp"
1292 "Major mode for editing Lisp code for Lisps other than GNU Emacs Lisp.
1293 Commands:
1294 Delete converts tabs to spaces as it moves back.
1295 Blank lines separate paragraphs. Semicolons start comments.
1296
1297 \\@{lisp-mode-map@}
1298 Note that `run-lisp' may be used either to start an inferior Lisp job
1299 or to switch back to an existing one.
1300 @end group
1301
1302 @group
1303 Entry to this mode calls the value of `lisp-mode-hook'
1304 if that value is non-nil."
1305 (lisp-mode-variables nil t)
1306 (set (make-local-variable 'find-tag-default-function) 'lisp-find-tag-default)
1307 (make-local-variable 'comment-start-skip)
1308 (setq comment-start-skip
1309 "\\(\\(^\\|[^\\\\\n]\\)\\(\\\\\\\\\\)*\\)\\(;+\\|#|\\) *")
1310 (setq imenu-case-fold-search t))
1311 @end group
1312 @end smallexample
1313
1314 @node Minor Modes
1315 @section Minor Modes
1316 @cindex minor mode
1317
1318 A @dfn{minor mode} provides optional features that users may enable or
1319 disable independently of the choice of major mode. Minor modes can be
1320 enabled individually or in combination.
1321
1322 Most minor modes implement features that are independent of the major
1323 mode, and can thus be used with most major modes. For example, Auto
1324 Fill mode works with any major mode that permits text insertion. A few
1325 minor modes, however, are specific to a particular major mode. For
1326 example, Diff Auto Refine mode is a minor mode that is intended to be
1327 used only with Diff mode.
1328
1329 Ideally, a minor mode should have its desired effect regardless of the
1330 other minor modes in effect. It should be possible to activate and
1331 deactivate minor modes in any order.
1332
1333 @defvar minor-mode-list
1334 The value of this variable is a list of all minor mode commands.
1335 @end defvar
1336
1337 @menu
1338 * Minor Mode Conventions:: Tips for writing a minor mode.
1339 * Keymaps and Minor Modes:: How a minor mode can have its own keymap.
1340 * Defining Minor Modes:: A convenient facility for defining minor modes.
1341 @end menu
1342
1343 @node Minor Mode Conventions
1344 @subsection Conventions for Writing Minor Modes
1345 @cindex minor mode conventions
1346 @cindex conventions for writing minor modes
1347
1348 There are conventions for writing minor modes just as there are for
1349 major modes. These conventions are described below. The easiest way to
1350 follow them is to use the macro @code{define-minor-mode}.
1351 @xref{Defining Minor Modes}.
1352
1353 @itemize @bullet
1354 @item
1355 @cindex mode variable
1356 Define a variable whose name ends in @samp{-mode}. We call this the
1357 @dfn{mode variable}. The minor mode command should set this variable.
1358 The value will be @code{nil} is the mode is disabled, and non-@code{nil}
1359 if the mode is enabled. The variable should be buffer-local if the
1360 minor mode is buffer-local.
1361
1362 This variable is used in conjunction with the @code{minor-mode-alist} to
1363 display the minor mode name in the mode line. It also determines
1364 whether the minor mode keymap is active, via @code{minor-mode-map-alist}
1365 (@pxref{Controlling Active Maps}). Individual commands or hooks can
1366 also check its value.
1367
1368 @item
1369 Define a command, called the @dfn{mode command}, whose name is the same
1370 as the mode variable. Its job is to set the value of the mode variable,
1371 plus anything else that needs to be done to actually enable or disable
1372 the mode's features.
1373
1374 The mode command should accept one optional argument. If called
1375 interactively with no prefix argument, it should toggle the mode
1376 (i.e.@: enable if it is disabled, and disable if it is enabled). If
1377 called interactively with a prefix argument, it should enable the mode
1378 if the argument is positive and disable it otherwise.
1379
1380 If the mode command is called from Lisp (i.e.@: non-interactively), it
1381 should enable the mode if the argument is omitted or @code{nil}; it
1382 should toggle the mode if the argument is the symbol @code{toggle};
1383 otherwise it should treat the argument in the same way as for an
1384 interactive call with a numeric prefix argument, as described above.
1385
1386 The following example shows how to implement this behavior (it is
1387 similar to the code generated by the @code{define-minor-mode} macro):
1388
1389 @example
1390 (interactive (list (or current-prefix-arg 'toggle)))
1391 (let ((enable (if (eq arg 'toggle)
1392 (not foo-mode) ; @r{this mode's mode variable}
1393 (> (prefix-numeric-value arg) 0))))
1394 (if enable
1395 @var{do-enable}
1396 @var{do-disable}))
1397 @end example
1398
1399 The reason for this somewhat complex behavior is that it lets users
1400 easily toggle the minor mode interactively, and also lets the minor mode
1401 be easily enabled in a mode hook, like this:
1402
1403 @example
1404 (add-hook 'text-mode-hook 'foo-mode)
1405 @end example
1406
1407 @noindent
1408 This behaves correctly whether or not @code{foo-mode} was already
1409 enabled, since the @code{foo-mode} mode command unconditionally enables
1410 the minor mode when it is called from Lisp with no argument. Disabling
1411 a minor mode in a mode hook is a little uglier:
1412
1413 @example
1414 (add-hook 'text-mode-hook (lambda () (foo-mode -1)))
1415 @end example
1416
1417 @noindent
1418 However, this is not very commonly done.
1419
1420 @item
1421 Add an element to @code{minor-mode-alist} for each minor mode
1422 (@pxref{Definition of minor-mode-alist}), if you want to indicate the
1423 minor mode in the mode line. This element should be a list of the
1424 following form:
1425
1426 @smallexample
1427 (@var{mode-variable} @var{string})
1428 @end smallexample
1429
1430 Here @var{mode-variable} is the variable that controls enabling of the
1431 minor mode, and @var{string} is a short string, starting with a space,
1432 to represent the mode in the mode line. These strings must be short so
1433 that there is room for several of them at once.
1434
1435 When you add an element to @code{minor-mode-alist}, use @code{assq} to
1436 check for an existing element, to avoid duplication. For example:
1437
1438 @smallexample
1439 @group
1440 (unless (assq 'leif-mode minor-mode-alist)
1441 (push '(leif-mode " Leif") minor-mode-alist))
1442 @end group
1443 @end smallexample
1444
1445 @noindent
1446 or like this, using @code{add-to-list} (@pxref{List Variables}):
1447
1448 @smallexample
1449 @group
1450 (add-to-list 'minor-mode-alist '(leif-mode " Leif"))
1451 @end group
1452 @end smallexample
1453 @end itemize
1454
1455 In addition, several major mode conventions apply to minor modes as
1456 well: those regarding the names of global symbols, the use of a hook at
1457 the end of the initialization function, and the use of keymaps and other
1458 tables.
1459
1460 The minor mode should, if possible, support enabling and disabling via
1461 Custom (@pxref{Customization}). To do this, the mode variable should be
1462 defined with @code{defcustom}, usually with @code{:type 'boolean}. If
1463 just setting the variable is not sufficient to enable the mode, you
1464 should also specify a @code{:set} method which enables the mode by
1465 invoking the mode command. Note in the variable's documentation string
1466 that setting the variable other than via Custom may not take effect.
1467 Also, mark the definition with an autoload cookie (@pxref{autoload
1468 cookie}), and specify a @code{:require} so that customizing the variable
1469 will load the library that defines the mode. For example:
1470
1471 @smallexample
1472 @group
1473 ;;;###autoload
1474 (defcustom msb-mode nil
1475 "Toggle msb-mode.
1476 Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
1477 use either \\[customize] or the function `msb-mode'."
1478 :set 'custom-set-minor-mode
1479 :initialize 'custom-initialize-default
1480 :version "20.4"
1481 :type 'boolean
1482 :group 'msb
1483 :require 'msb)
1484 @end group
1485 @end smallexample
1486
1487 @node Keymaps and Minor Modes
1488 @subsection Keymaps and Minor Modes
1489
1490 Each minor mode can have its own keymap, which is active when the mode
1491 is enabled. To set up a keymap for a minor mode, add an element to the
1492 alist @code{minor-mode-map-alist}. @xref{Definition of minor-mode-map-alist}.
1493
1494 @cindex @code{self-insert-command}, minor modes
1495 One use of minor mode keymaps is to modify the behavior of certain
1496 self-inserting characters so that they do something else as well as
1497 self-insert. (Another way to customize @code{self-insert-command} is
1498 through @code{post-self-insert-hook}. Apart from this, the facilities
1499 for customizing @code{self-insert-command} are limited to special cases,
1500 designed for abbrevs and Auto Fill mode. Do not try substituting your
1501 own definition of @code{self-insert-command} for the standard one. The
1502 editor command loop handles this function specially.)
1503
1504 The key sequences bound in a minor mode should consist of @kbd{C-c}
1505 followed by one of @kbd{.,/?`'"[]\|~!#$%^&*()-_+=}. (The other
1506 punctuation characters are reserved for major modes.)
1507
1508 @node Defining Minor Modes
1509 @subsection Defining Minor Modes
1510
1511 The macro @code{define-minor-mode} offers a convenient way of
1512 implementing a mode in one self-contained definition.
1513
1514 @defmac define-minor-mode mode doc [init-value [lighter [keymap]]] keyword-args@dots{} body@dots{}
1515 This macro defines a new minor mode whose name is @var{mode} (a
1516 symbol). It defines a command named @var{mode} to toggle the minor
1517 mode, with @var{doc} as its documentation string.
1518
1519 The toggle command takes one optional (prefix) argument.
1520 If called interactively with no argument it toggles the mode on or off.
1521 A positive prefix argument enables the mode, any other prefix argument
1522 disables it. From Lisp, an argument of @code{toggle} toggles the mode,
1523 whereas an omitted or @code{nil} argument enables the mode.
1524 This makes it easy to enable the minor mode in a major mode hook, for example.
1525 If @var{doc} is nil, the macro supplies a default documentation string
1526 explaining the above.
1527
1528 By default, it also defines a variable named @var{mode}, which is set to
1529 @code{t} or @code{nil} by enabling or disabling the mode. The variable
1530 is initialized to @var{init-value}. Except in unusual circumstances
1531 (see below), this value must be @code{nil}.
1532
1533 The string @var{lighter} says what to display in the mode line
1534 when the mode is enabled; if it is @code{nil}, the mode is not displayed
1535 in the mode line.
1536
1537 The optional argument @var{keymap} specifies the keymap for the minor
1538 mode. If non-@code{nil}, it should be a variable name (whose value is
1539 a keymap), a keymap, or an alist of the form
1540
1541 @example
1542 (@var{key-sequence} . @var{definition})
1543 @end example
1544
1545 @noindent
1546 where each @var{key-sequence} and @var{definition} are arguments
1547 suitable for passing to @code{define-key} (@pxref{Changing Key
1548 Bindings}). If @var{keymap} is a keymap or an alist, this also
1549 defines the variable @code{@var{mode}-map}.
1550
1551 The above three arguments @var{init-value}, @var{lighter}, and
1552 @var{keymap} can be (partially) omitted when @var{keyword-args} are
1553 used. The @var{keyword-args} consist of keywords followed by
1554 corresponding values. A few keywords have special meanings:
1555
1556 @table @code
1557 @item :group @var{group}
1558 Custom group name to use in all generated @code{defcustom} forms.
1559 Defaults to @var{mode} without the possible trailing @samp{-mode}.
1560 @strong{Warning:} don't use this default group name unless you have
1561 written a @code{defgroup} to define that group properly. @xref{Group
1562 Definitions}.
1563
1564 @item :global @var{global}
1565 If non-@code{nil}, this specifies that the minor mode should be global
1566 rather than buffer-local. It defaults to @code{nil}.
1567
1568 One of the effects of making a minor mode global is that the
1569 @var{mode} variable becomes a customization variable. Toggling it
1570 through the Custom interface turns the mode on and off, and its value
1571 can be saved for future Emacs sessions (@pxref{Saving
1572 Customizations,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}. For the saved
1573 variable to work, you should ensure that the @code{define-minor-mode}
1574 form is evaluated each time Emacs starts; for packages that are not
1575 part of Emacs, the easiest way to do this is to specify a
1576 @code{:require} keyword.
1577
1578 @item :init-value @var{init-value}
1579 This is equivalent to specifying @var{init-value} positionally.
1580
1581 @item :lighter @var{lighter}
1582 This is equivalent to specifying @var{lighter} positionally.
1583
1584 @item :keymap @var{keymap}
1585 This is equivalent to specifying @var{keymap} positionally.
1586
1587 @item :variable @var{place}
1588 This replaces the default variable @var{mode}, used to store the state
1589 of the mode. If you specify this, the @var{mode} variable is not
1590 defined, and any @var{init-value} argument is unused. @var{place}
1591 can be a different named variable (which you must define yourself), or
1592 anything that can be used with the @code{setf} function
1593 (@pxref{Generalized Variables,,, cl, Common Lisp Extensions}).
1594 @var{place} can also be a cons @code{(@var{get} . @var{set})},
1595 where @var{get} is an expression that returns the current state,
1596 and @var{set} is a function of one argument (a state) that sets it.
1597
1598 @item :after-hook @var{after-hook}
1599 This defines a single lisp form which is evaluated after the mode hooks
1600 have run. It should not be quoted.
1601 @end table
1602
1603 Any other keyword arguments are passed directly to the
1604 @code{defcustom} generated for the variable @var{mode}.
1605
1606 The command named @var{mode} first performs the standard actions such as
1607 setting the variable named @var{mode} and then executes the @var{body}
1608 forms, if any. It then runs the mode hook variable
1609 @code{@var{mode}-hook} and finishes by evaluating any form in
1610 @code{:after-hook}.
1611 @end defmac
1612
1613 The initial value must be @code{nil} except in cases where (1) the
1614 mode is preloaded in Emacs, or (2) it is painless for loading to
1615 enable the mode even though the user did not request it. For
1616 instance, if the mode has no effect unless something else is enabled,
1617 and will always be loaded by that time, enabling it by default is
1618 harmless. But these are unusual circumstances. Normally, the
1619 initial value must be @code{nil}.
1620
1621 @findex easy-mmode-define-minor-mode
1622 The name @code{easy-mmode-define-minor-mode} is an alias
1623 for this macro.
1624
1625 Here is an example of using @code{define-minor-mode}:
1626
1627 @smallexample
1628 (define-minor-mode hungry-mode
1629 "Toggle Hungry mode.
1630 Interactively with no argument, this command toggles the mode.
1631 A positive prefix argument enables the mode, any other prefix
1632 argument disables it. From Lisp, argument omitted or nil enables
1633 the mode, `toggle' toggles the state.
1634
1635 When Hungry mode is enabled, the control delete key
1636 gobbles all preceding whitespace except the last.
1637 See the command \\[hungry-electric-delete]."
1638 ;; The initial value.
1639 nil
1640 ;; The indicator for the mode line.
1641 " Hungry"
1642 ;; The minor mode bindings.
1643 '(([C-backspace] . hungry-electric-delete))
1644 :group 'hunger)
1645 @end smallexample
1646
1647 @noindent
1648 This defines a minor mode named ``Hungry mode,'' a command named
1649 @code{hungry-mode} to toggle it, a variable named @code{hungry-mode}
1650 which indicates whether the mode is enabled, and a variable named
1651 @code{hungry-mode-map} which holds the keymap that is active when the
1652 mode is enabled. It initializes the keymap with a key binding for
1653 @kbd{C-@key{DEL}}. It puts the variable @code{hungry-mode} into
1654 custom group @code{hunger}. There are no @var{body} forms---many
1655 minor modes don't need any.
1656
1657 Here's an equivalent way to write it:
1658
1659 @smallexample
1660 (define-minor-mode hungry-mode
1661 "Toggle Hungry mode.
1662 ...rest of documentation as before..."
1663 ;; The initial value.
1664 :init-value nil
1665 ;; The indicator for the mode line.
1666 :lighter " Hungry"
1667 ;; The minor mode bindings.
1668 :keymap
1669 '(([C-backspace] . hungry-electric-delete)
1670 ([C-M-backspace]
1671 . (lambda ()
1672 (interactive)
1673 (hungry-electric-delete t))))
1674 :group 'hunger)
1675 @end smallexample
1676
1677 @defmac define-globalized-minor-mode global-mode mode turn-on keyword-args@dots{}
1678 This defines a global toggle named @var{global-mode} whose meaning is
1679 to enable or disable the buffer-local minor mode @var{mode} in all
1680 buffers. To turn on the minor mode in a buffer, it uses the function
1681 @var{turn-on}; to turn off the minor mode, it calls @code{mode} with
1682 @minus{}1 as argument.
1683
1684 Globally enabling the mode also affects buffers subsequently created
1685 by visiting files, and buffers that use a major mode other than
1686 Fundamental mode; but it does not detect the creation of a new buffer
1687 in Fundamental mode.
1688
1689 This defines the customization option @var{global-mode} (@pxref{Customization}),
1690 which can be toggled in the Custom interface to turn the minor mode on
1691 and off. As with @code{define-minor-mode}, you should ensure that the
1692 @code{define-globalized-minor-mode} form is evaluated each time Emacs
1693 starts, for example by providing a @code{:require} keyword.
1694
1695 Use @code{:group @var{group}} in @var{keyword-args} to specify the
1696 custom group for the mode variable of the global minor mode.
1697
1698 Generally speaking, when you define a globalized minor mode, you should
1699 also define a non-globalized version, so that people can use (or
1700 disable) it in individual buffers. This also allows them to disable a
1701 globally enabled minor mode in a specific major mode, by using that
1702 mode's hook.
1703 @end defmac
1704
1705
1706 @node Mode Line Format
1707 @section Mode Line Format
1708 @cindex mode line
1709
1710 Each Emacs window (aside from minibuffer windows) typically has a mode
1711 line at the bottom, which displays status information about the buffer
1712 displayed in the window. The mode line contains information about the
1713 buffer, such as its name, associated file, depth of recursive editing,
1714 and major and minor modes. A window can also have a @dfn{header
1715 line}, which is much like the mode line but appears at the top of the
1716 window.
1717
1718 This section describes how to control the contents of the mode line
1719 and header line. We include it in this chapter because much of the
1720 information displayed in the mode line relates to the enabled major and
1721 minor modes.
1722
1723 @menu
1724 * Base: Mode Line Basics. Basic ideas of mode line control.
1725 * Data: Mode Line Data. The data structure that controls the mode line.
1726 * Top: Mode Line Top. The top level variable, mode-line-format.
1727 * Mode Line Variables:: Variables used in that data structure.
1728 * %-Constructs:: Putting information into a mode line.
1729 * Properties in Mode:: Using text properties in the mode line.
1730 * Header Lines:: Like a mode line, but at the top.
1731 * Emulating Mode Line:: Formatting text as the mode line would.
1732 @end menu
1733
1734 @node Mode Line Basics
1735 @subsection Mode Line Basics
1736
1737 The contents of each mode line are specified by the buffer-local
1738 variable @code{mode-line-format} (@pxref{Mode Line Top}). This variable
1739 holds a @dfn{mode line construct}: a template that controls what is
1740 displayed on the buffer's mode line. The value of
1741 @code{header-line-format} specifies the buffer's header line in the same
1742 way. All windows for the same buffer use the same
1743 @code{mode-line-format} and @code{header-line-format}.
1744
1745 For efficiency, Emacs does not continuously recompute each window's
1746 mode line and header line. It does so when circumstances appear to call
1747 for it---for instance, if you change the window configuration, switch
1748 buffers, narrow or widen the buffer, scroll, or modify the buffer. If
1749 you alter any of the variables referenced by @code{mode-line-format} or
1750 @code{header-line-format} (@pxref{Mode Line Variables}), or any other
1751 data structures that affect how text is displayed (@pxref{Display}), you
1752 should use the function @code{force-mode-line-update} to update the
1753 display.
1754
1755 @defun force-mode-line-update &optional all
1756 This function forces Emacs to update the current buffer's mode line and
1757 header line, based on the latest values of all relevant variables,
1758 during its next redisplay cycle. If the optional argument @var{all} is
1759 non-@code{nil}, it forces an update for all mode lines and header lines.
1760
1761 This function also forces an update of the menu bar and frame title.
1762 @end defun
1763
1764 The selected window's mode line is usually displayed in a different
1765 color using the face @code{mode-line}. Other windows' mode lines appear
1766 in the face @code{mode-line-inactive} instead. @xref{Faces}.
1767
1768 @node Mode Line Data
1769 @subsection The Data Structure of the Mode Line
1770 @cindex mode line construct
1771
1772 The mode line contents are controlled by a data structure called a
1773 @dfn{mode line construct}, made up of lists, strings, symbols, and
1774 numbers kept in buffer-local variables. Each data type has a specific
1775 meaning for the mode line appearance, as described below. The same data
1776 structure is used for constructing frame titles (@pxref{Frame Titles})
1777 and header lines (@pxref{Header Lines}).
1778
1779 A mode line construct may be as simple as a fixed string of text,
1780 but it usually specifies how to combine fixed strings with variables'
1781 values to construct the text. Many of these variables are themselves
1782 defined to have mode line constructs as their values.
1783
1784 Here are the meanings of various data types as mode line constructs:
1785
1786 @table @code
1787 @cindex percent symbol in mode line
1788 @item @var{string}
1789 A string as a mode line construct appears verbatim except for
1790 @dfn{@code{%}-constructs} in it. These stand for substitution of
1791 other data; see @ref{%-Constructs}.
1792
1793 If parts of the string have @code{face} properties, they control
1794 display of the text just as they would text in the buffer. Any
1795 characters which have no @code{face} properties are displayed, by
1796 default, in the face @code{mode-line} or @code{mode-line-inactive}
1797 (@pxref{Standard Faces,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}). The
1798 @code{help-echo} and @code{local-map} properties in @var{string} have
1799 special meanings. @xref{Properties in Mode}.
1800
1801 @item @var{symbol}
1802 A symbol as a mode line construct stands for its value. The value of
1803 @var{symbol} is used as a mode line construct, in place of @var{symbol}.
1804 However, the symbols @code{t} and @code{nil} are ignored, as is any
1805 symbol whose value is void.
1806
1807 There is one exception: if the value of @var{symbol} is a string, it is
1808 displayed verbatim: the @code{%}-constructs are not recognized.
1809
1810 Unless @var{symbol} is marked as ``risky'' (i.e., it has a
1811 non-@code{nil} @code{risky-local-variable} property), all text
1812 properties specified in @var{symbol}'s value are ignored. This includes
1813 the text properties of strings in @var{symbol}'s value, as well as all
1814 @code{:eval} and @code{:propertize} forms in it. (The reason for this
1815 is security: non-risky variables could be set automatically from file
1816 variables without prompting the user.)
1817
1818 @item (@var{string} @var{rest}@dots{})
1819 @itemx (@var{list} @var{rest}@dots{})
1820 A list whose first element is a string or list means to process all the
1821 elements recursively and concatenate the results. This is the most
1822 common form of mode line construct.
1823
1824 @item (:eval @var{form})
1825 A list whose first element is the symbol @code{:eval} says to evaluate
1826 @var{form}, and use the result as a string to display. Make sure this
1827 evaluation cannot load any files, as doing so could cause infinite
1828 recursion.
1829
1830 @item (:propertize @var{elt} @var{props}@dots{})
1831 A list whose first element is the symbol @code{:propertize} says to
1832 process the mode line construct @var{elt} recursively, then add the text
1833 properties specified by @var{props} to the result. The argument
1834 @var{props} should consist of zero or more pairs @var{text-property}
1835 @var{value}.
1836
1837 @item (@var{symbol} @var{then} @var{else})
1838 A list whose first element is a symbol that is not a keyword specifies
1839 a conditional. Its meaning depends on the value of @var{symbol}. If
1840 @var{symbol} has a non-@code{nil} value, the second element,
1841 @var{then}, is processed recursively as a mode line element.
1842 Otherwise, the third element, @var{else}, is processed recursively.
1843 You may omit @var{else}; then the mode line element displays nothing
1844 if the value of @var{symbol} is @code{nil} or void.
1845
1846 @item (@var{width} @var{rest}@dots{})
1847 A list whose first element is an integer specifies truncation or
1848 padding of the results of @var{rest}. The remaining elements
1849 @var{rest} are processed recursively as mode line constructs and
1850 concatenated together. When @var{width} is positive, the result is
1851 space filled on the right if its width is less than @var{width}. When
1852 @var{width} is negative, the result is truncated on the right to
1853 @minus{}@var{width} columns if its width exceeds @minus{}@var{width}.
1854
1855 For example, the usual way to show what percentage of a buffer is above
1856 the top of the window is to use a list like this: @code{(-3 "%p")}.
1857 @end table
1858
1859 @node Mode Line Top
1860 @subsection The Top Level of Mode Line Control
1861
1862 The variable in overall control of the mode line is
1863 @code{mode-line-format}.
1864
1865 @defopt mode-line-format
1866 The value of this variable is a mode line construct that controls the
1867 contents of the mode-line. It is always buffer-local in all buffers.
1868
1869 If you set this variable to @code{nil} in a buffer, that buffer does not
1870 have a mode line. (A window that is just one line tall also does not
1871 display a mode line.)
1872 @end defopt
1873
1874 The default value of @code{mode-line-format} is designed to use the
1875 values of other variables such as @code{mode-line-position} and
1876 @code{mode-line-modes} (which in turn incorporates the values of the
1877 variables @code{mode-name} and @code{minor-mode-alist}). Very few
1878 modes need to alter @code{mode-line-format} itself. For most
1879 purposes, it is sufficient to alter some of the variables that
1880 @code{mode-line-format} either directly or indirectly refers to.
1881
1882 If you do alter @code{mode-line-format} itself, the new value should
1883 use the same variables that appear in the default value (@pxref{Mode
1884 Line Variables}), rather than duplicating their contents or displaying
1885 the information in another fashion. This way, customizations made by
1886 the user or by Lisp programs (such as @code{display-time} and major
1887 modes) via changes to those variables remain effective.
1888
1889 Here is a hypothetical example of a @code{mode-line-format} that might
1890 be useful for Shell mode (in reality, Shell mode does not set
1891 @code{mode-line-format}):
1892
1893 @example
1894 @group
1895 (setq mode-line-format
1896 (list "-"
1897 'mode-line-mule-info
1898 'mode-line-modified
1899 'mode-line-frame-identification
1900 "%b--"
1901 @end group
1902 @group
1903 ;; @r{Note that this is evaluated while making the list.}
1904 ;; @r{It makes a mode line construct which is just a string.}
1905 (getenv "HOST")
1906 @end group
1907 ":"
1908 'default-directory
1909 " "
1910 'global-mode-string
1911 " %[("
1912 '(:eval (mode-line-mode-name))
1913 'mode-line-process
1914 'minor-mode-alist
1915 "%n"
1916 ")%]--"
1917 @group
1918 '(which-func-mode ("" which-func-format "--"))
1919 '(line-number-mode "L%l--")
1920 '(column-number-mode "C%c--")
1921 '(-3 "%p")))
1922 @end group
1923 @end example
1924
1925 @noindent
1926 (The variables @code{line-number-mode}, @code{column-number-mode}
1927 and @code{which-func-mode} enable particular minor modes; as usual,
1928 these variable names are also the minor mode command names.)
1929
1930 @node Mode Line Variables
1931 @subsection Variables Used in the Mode Line
1932
1933 This section describes variables incorporated by the standard value of
1934 @code{mode-line-format} into the text of the mode line. There is
1935 nothing inherently special about these variables; any other variables
1936 could have the same effects on the mode line if the value of
1937 @code{mode-line-format} is changed to use them. However, various parts
1938 of Emacs set these variables on the understanding that they will control
1939 parts of the mode line; therefore, practically speaking, it is essential
1940 for the mode line to use them.
1941
1942 @defvar mode-line-mule-info
1943 This variable holds the value of the mode line construct that displays
1944 information about the language environment, buffer coding system, and
1945 current input method. @xref{Non-ASCII Characters}.
1946 @end defvar
1947
1948 @defvar mode-line-modified
1949 This variable holds the value of the mode line construct that displays
1950 whether the current buffer is modified. Its default value displays
1951 @samp{**} if the buffer is modified, @samp{--} if the buffer is not
1952 modified, @samp{%%} if the buffer is read only, and @samp{%*} if the
1953 buffer is read only and modified.
1954
1955 Changing this variable does not force an update of the mode line.
1956 @end defvar
1957
1958 @defvar mode-line-frame-identification
1959 This variable identifies the current frame. Its default value
1960 displays @code{" "} if you are using a window system which can show
1961 multiple frames, or @code{"-%F "} on an ordinary terminal which shows
1962 only one frame at a time.
1963 @end defvar
1964
1965 @defvar mode-line-buffer-identification
1966 This variable identifies the buffer being displayed in the window.
1967 Its default value displays the buffer name, padded with spaces to at
1968 least 12 columns.
1969 @end defvar
1970
1971 @defopt mode-line-position
1972 This variable indicates the position in the buffer. Its default value
1973 displays the buffer percentage and, optionally, the buffer size, the
1974 line number and the column number.
1975 @end defopt
1976
1977 @defvar vc-mode
1978 The variable @code{vc-mode}, buffer-local in each buffer, records
1979 whether the buffer's visited file is maintained with version control,
1980 and, if so, which kind. Its value is a string that appears in the mode
1981 line, or @code{nil} for no version control.
1982 @end defvar
1983
1984 @defopt mode-line-modes
1985 This variable displays the buffer's major and minor modes. Its
1986 default value also displays the recursive editing level, information
1987 on the process status, and whether narrowing is in effect.
1988 @end defopt
1989
1990 @defopt mode-line-remote
1991 This variable is used to show whether @code{default-directory} for the
1992 current buffer is remote.
1993 @end defopt
1994
1995 @defopt mode-line-client
1996 This variable is used to identify @code{emacsclient} frames.
1997 @end defopt
1998
1999 The following three variables are used in @code{mode-line-modes}:
2000
2001 @defvar mode-name
2002 This buffer-local variable holds the ``pretty'' name of the current
2003 buffer's major mode. Each major mode should set this variable so that
2004 the mode name will appear in the mode line. The value does not have
2005 to be a string, but can use any of the data types valid in a mode-line
2006 construct (@pxref{Mode Line Data}). To compute the string that will
2007 identify the mode name in the mode line, use @code{format-mode-line}
2008 (@pxref{Emulating Mode Line}).
2009 @end defvar
2010
2011 @defvar mode-line-process
2012 This buffer-local variable contains the mode line information on process
2013 status in modes used for communicating with subprocesses. It is
2014 displayed immediately following the major mode name, with no intervening
2015 space. For example, its value in the @samp{*shell*} buffer is
2016 @code{(":%s")}, which allows the shell to display its status along
2017 with the major mode as: @samp{(Shell:run)}. Normally this variable
2018 is @code{nil}.
2019 @end defvar
2020
2021 @defvar minor-mode-alist
2022 @anchor{Definition of minor-mode-alist}
2023 This variable holds an association list whose elements specify how the
2024 mode line should indicate that a minor mode is active. Each element of
2025 the @code{minor-mode-alist} should be a two-element list:
2026
2027 @example
2028 (@var{minor-mode-variable} @var{mode-line-string})
2029 @end example
2030
2031 More generally, @var{mode-line-string} can be any mode line construct.
2032 It appears in the mode line when the value of @var{minor-mode-variable}
2033 is non-@code{nil}, and not otherwise. These strings should begin with
2034 spaces so that they don't run together. Conventionally, the
2035 @var{minor-mode-variable} for a specific mode is set to a non-@code{nil}
2036 value when that minor mode is activated.
2037
2038 @code{minor-mode-alist} itself is not buffer-local. Each variable
2039 mentioned in the alist should be buffer-local if its minor mode can be
2040 enabled separately in each buffer.
2041 @end defvar
2042
2043 @defvar global-mode-string
2044 This variable holds a mode line construct that, by default, appears in
2045 the mode line just after the @code{which-func-mode} minor mode if set,
2046 else after @code{mode-line-modes}. The command @code{display-time} sets
2047 @code{global-mode-string} to refer to the variable
2048 @code{display-time-string}, which holds a string containing the time and
2049 load information.
2050
2051 The @samp{%M} construct substitutes the value of
2052 @code{global-mode-string}, but that is obsolete, since the variable is
2053 included in the mode line from @code{mode-line-format}.
2054 @end defvar
2055
2056 Here is a simplified version of the default value of
2057 @code{mode-line-format}. The real default value also
2058 specifies addition of text properties.
2059
2060 @example
2061 @group
2062 ("-"
2063 mode-line-mule-info
2064 mode-line-modified
2065 mode-line-frame-identification
2066 mode-line-buffer-identification
2067 @end group
2068 " "
2069 mode-line-position
2070 (vc-mode vc-mode)
2071 " "
2072 @group
2073 mode-line-modes
2074 (which-func-mode ("" which-func-format "--"))
2075 (global-mode-string ("--" global-mode-string))
2076 "-%-")
2077 @end group
2078 @end example
2079
2080 @node %-Constructs
2081 @subsection @code{%}-Constructs in the Mode Line
2082
2083 Strings used as mode line constructs can use certain
2084 @code{%}-constructs to substitute various kinds of data. Here is a
2085 list of the defined @code{%}-constructs, and what they mean. In any
2086 construct except @samp{%%}, you can add a decimal integer after the
2087 @samp{%} to specify a minimum field width. If the width is less, the
2088 field is padded with spaces to the right.
2089
2090 @table @code
2091 @item %b
2092 The current buffer name, obtained with the @code{buffer-name} function.
2093 @xref{Buffer Names}.
2094
2095 @item %c
2096 The current column number of point.
2097
2098 @item %e
2099 When Emacs is nearly out of memory for Lisp objects, a brief message
2100 saying so. Otherwise, this is empty.
2101
2102 @item %f
2103 The visited file name, obtained with the @code{buffer-file-name}
2104 function. @xref{Buffer File Name}.
2105
2106 @item %F
2107 The title (only on a window system) or the name of the selected frame.
2108 @xref{Basic Parameters}.
2109
2110 @item %i
2111 The size of the accessible part of the current buffer; basically
2112 @code{(- (point-max) (point-min))}.
2113
2114 @item %I
2115 Like @samp{%i}, but the size is printed in a more readable way by using
2116 @samp{k} for 10^3, @samp{M} for 10^6, @samp{G} for 10^9, etc., to
2117 abbreviate.
2118
2119 @item %l
2120 The current line number of point, counting within the accessible portion
2121 of the buffer.
2122
2123 @item %n
2124 @samp{Narrow} when narrowing is in effect; nothing otherwise (see
2125 @code{narrow-to-region} in @ref{Narrowing}).
2126
2127 @item %p
2128 The percentage of the buffer text above the @strong{top} of window, or
2129 @samp{Top}, @samp{Bottom} or @samp{All}. Note that the default mode
2130 line construct truncates this to three characters.
2131
2132 @item %P
2133 The percentage of the buffer text that is above the @strong{bottom} of
2134 the window (which includes the text visible in the window, as well as
2135 the text above the top), plus @samp{Top} if the top of the buffer is
2136 visible on screen; or @samp{Bottom} or @samp{All}.
2137
2138 @item %s
2139 The status of the subprocess belonging to the current buffer, obtained with
2140 @code{process-status}. @xref{Process Information}.
2141
2142 @item %t
2143 Whether the visited file is a text file or a binary file. This is a
2144 meaningful distinction only on certain operating systems (@pxref{MS-DOS
2145 File Types}).
2146
2147 @item %z
2148 The mnemonics of keyboard, terminal, and buffer coding systems.
2149
2150 @item %Z
2151 Like @samp{%z}, but including the end-of-line format.
2152
2153 @item %*
2154 @samp{%} if the buffer is read only (see @code{buffer-read-only}); @*
2155 @samp{*} if the buffer is modified (see @code{buffer-modified-p}); @*
2156 @samp{-} otherwise. @xref{Buffer Modification}.
2157
2158 @item %+
2159 @samp{*} if the buffer is modified (see @code{buffer-modified-p}); @*
2160 @samp{%} if the buffer is read only (see @code{buffer-read-only}); @*
2161 @samp{-} otherwise. This differs from @samp{%*} only for a modified
2162 read-only buffer. @xref{Buffer Modification}.
2163
2164 @item %&
2165 @samp{*} if the buffer is modified, and @samp{-} otherwise.
2166
2167 @item %[
2168 An indication of the depth of recursive editing levels (not counting
2169 minibuffer levels): one @samp{[} for each editing level.
2170 @xref{Recursive Editing}.
2171
2172 @item %]
2173 One @samp{]} for each recursive editing level (not counting minibuffer
2174 levels).
2175
2176 @item %-
2177 Dashes sufficient to fill the remainder of the mode line.
2178
2179 @item %%
2180 The character @samp{%}---this is how to include a literal @samp{%} in a
2181 string in which @code{%}-constructs are allowed.
2182 @end table
2183
2184 The following two @code{%}-constructs are still supported, but they are
2185 obsolete, since you can get the same results with the variables
2186 @code{mode-name} and @code{global-mode-string}.
2187
2188 @table @code
2189 @item %m
2190 The value of @code{mode-name}.
2191
2192 @item %M
2193 The value of @code{global-mode-string}.
2194 @end table
2195
2196 @node Properties in Mode
2197 @subsection Properties in the Mode Line
2198 @cindex text properties in the mode line
2199
2200 Certain text properties are meaningful in the
2201 mode line. The @code{face} property affects the appearance of text; the
2202 @code{help-echo} property associates help strings with the text, and
2203 @code{local-map} can make the text mouse-sensitive.
2204
2205 There are four ways to specify text properties for text in the mode
2206 line:
2207
2208 @enumerate
2209 @item
2210 Put a string with a text property directly into the mode line data
2211 structure.
2212
2213 @item
2214 Put a text property on a mode line %-construct such as @samp{%12b}; then
2215 the expansion of the %-construct will have that same text property.
2216
2217 @item
2218 Use a @code{(:propertize @var{elt} @var{props}@dots{})} construct to
2219 give @var{elt} a text property specified by @var{props}.
2220
2221 @item
2222 Use a list containing @code{:eval @var{form}} in the mode line data
2223 structure, and make @var{form} evaluate to a string that has a text
2224 property.
2225 @end enumerate
2226
2227 You can use the @code{local-map} property to specify a keymap. This
2228 keymap only takes real effect for mouse clicks; binding character keys
2229 and function keys to it has no effect, since it is impossible to move
2230 point into the mode line.
2231
2232 When the mode line refers to a variable which does not have a
2233 non-@code{nil} @code{risky-local-variable} property, any text
2234 properties given or specified within that variable's values are
2235 ignored. This is because such properties could otherwise specify
2236 functions to be called, and those functions could come from file
2237 local variables.
2238
2239 @node Header Lines
2240 @subsection Window Header Lines
2241 @cindex header line (of a window)
2242 @cindex window header line
2243
2244 A window can have a @dfn{header line} at the top, just as it can have
2245 a mode line at the bottom. The header line feature works just like the
2246 mode line feature, except that it's controlled by
2247 @code{header-line-format}:
2248
2249 @defvar header-line-format
2250 This variable, local in every buffer, specifies how to display the
2251 header line, for windows displaying the buffer. The format of the value
2252 is the same as for @code{mode-line-format} (@pxref{Mode Line Data}).
2253 It is normally @code{nil}, so that ordinary buffers have no header line.
2254 @end defvar
2255
2256 A window that is just one line tall never displays a header line. A
2257 window that is two lines tall cannot display both a mode line and a
2258 header line at once; if it has a mode line, then it does not display a
2259 header line.
2260
2261 @node Emulating Mode Line
2262 @subsection Emulating Mode Line Formatting
2263
2264 You can use the function @code{format-mode-line} to compute the text
2265 that would appear in a mode line or header line based on a certain
2266 mode line construct.
2267
2268 @defun format-mode-line format &optional face window buffer
2269 This function formats a line of text according to @var{format} as if it
2270 were generating the mode line for @var{window}, but it also returns the
2271 text as a string. The argument @var{window} defaults to the selected
2272 window. If @var{buffer} is non-@code{nil}, all the information used is
2273 taken from @var{buffer}; by default, it comes from @var{window}'s
2274 buffer.
2275
2276 The value string normally has text properties that correspond to the
2277 faces, keymaps, etc., that the mode line would have. Any character for
2278 which no @code{face} property is specified by @var{format} gets a
2279 default value determined by @var{face}. If @var{face} is @code{t}, that
2280 stands for either @code{mode-line} if @var{window} is selected,
2281 otherwise @code{mode-line-inactive}. If @var{face} is @code{nil} or
2282 omitted, that stands for the default face. If @var{face} is an integer,
2283 the value returned by this function will have no text properties.
2284
2285 You can also specify other valid faces as the value of @var{face}.
2286 If specified, that face provides the @code{face} property for characters
2287 whose face is not specified by @var{format}.
2288
2289 Note that using @code{mode-line}, @code{mode-line-inactive}, or
2290 @code{header-line} as @var{face} will actually redisplay the mode line
2291 or the header line, respectively, using the current definitions of the
2292 corresponding face, in addition to returning the formatted string.
2293 (Other faces do not cause redisplay.)
2294
2295 For example, @code{(format-mode-line header-line-format)} returns the
2296 text that would appear in the selected window's header line (@code{""}
2297 if it has no header line). @code{(format-mode-line header-line-format
2298 'header-line)} returns the same text, with each character
2299 carrying the face that it will have in the header line itself, and also
2300 redraws the header line.
2301 @end defun
2302
2303 @node Imenu
2304 @section Imenu
2305
2306 @cindex Imenu
2307 @dfn{Imenu} is a feature that lets users select a definition or
2308 section in the buffer, from a menu which lists all of them, to go
2309 directly to that location in the buffer. Imenu works by constructing
2310 a buffer index which lists the names and buffer positions of the
2311 definitions, or other named portions of the buffer; then the user can
2312 choose one of them and move point to it. Major modes can add a menu
2313 bar item to use Imenu using @code{imenu-add-to-menubar}.
2314
2315 @defun imenu-add-to-menubar name
2316 This function defines a local menu bar item named @var{name}
2317 to run Imenu.
2318 @end defun
2319
2320 The user-level commands for using Imenu are described in the Emacs
2321 Manual (@pxref{Imenu,, Imenu, emacs, the Emacs Manual}). This section
2322 explains how to customize Imenu's method of finding definitions or
2323 buffer portions for a particular major mode.
2324
2325 The usual and simplest way is to set the variable
2326 @code{imenu-generic-expression}:
2327
2328 @defvar imenu-generic-expression
2329 This variable, if non-@code{nil}, is a list that specifies regular
2330 expressions for finding definitions for Imenu. Simple elements of
2331 @code{imenu-generic-expression} look like this:
2332
2333 @example
2334 (@var{menu-title} @var{regexp} @var{index})
2335 @end example
2336
2337 Here, if @var{menu-title} is non-@code{nil}, it says that the matches
2338 for this element should go in a submenu of the buffer index;
2339 @var{menu-title} itself specifies the name for the submenu. If
2340 @var{menu-title} is @code{nil}, the matches for this element go directly
2341 in the top level of the buffer index.
2342
2343 The second item in the list, @var{regexp}, is a regular expression
2344 (@pxref{Regular Expressions}); anything in the buffer that it matches
2345 is considered a definition, something to mention in the buffer index.
2346 The third item, @var{index}, is a non-negative integer that indicates
2347 which subexpression in @var{regexp} matches the definition's name.
2348
2349 An element can also look like this:
2350
2351 @example
2352 (@var{menu-title} @var{regexp} @var{index} @var{function} @var{arguments}@dots{})
2353 @end example
2354
2355 Each match for this element creates an index item, and when the index
2356 item is selected by the user, it calls @var{function} with arguments
2357 consisting of the item name, the buffer position, and @var{arguments}.
2358
2359 For Emacs Lisp mode, @code{imenu-generic-expression} could look like
2360 this:
2361
2362 @c should probably use imenu-syntax-alist and \\sw rather than [-A-Za-z0-9+]
2363 @example
2364 @group
2365 ((nil "^\\s-*(def\\(un\\|subst\\|macro\\|advice\\)\
2366 \\s-+\\([-A-Za-z0-9+]+\\)" 2)
2367 @end group
2368 @group
2369 ("*Vars*" "^\\s-*(def\\(var\\|const\\)\
2370 \\s-+\\([-A-Za-z0-9+]+\\)" 2)
2371 @end group
2372 @group
2373 ("*Types*"
2374 "^\\s-*\
2375 (def\\(type\\|struct\\|class\\|ine-condition\\)\
2376 \\s-+\\([-A-Za-z0-9+]+\\)" 2))
2377 @end group
2378 @end example
2379
2380 Setting this variable makes it buffer-local in the current buffer.
2381 @end defvar
2382
2383 @defvar imenu-case-fold-search
2384 This variable controls whether matching against the regular
2385 expressions in the value of @code{imenu-generic-expression} is
2386 case-sensitive: @code{t}, the default, means matching should ignore
2387 case.
2388
2389 Setting this variable makes it buffer-local in the current buffer.
2390 @end defvar
2391
2392 @defvar imenu-syntax-alist
2393 This variable is an alist of syntax table modifiers to use while
2394 processing @code{imenu-generic-expression}, to override the syntax table
2395 of the current buffer. Each element should have this form:
2396
2397 @example
2398 (@var{characters} . @var{syntax-description})
2399 @end example
2400
2401 The @sc{car}, @var{characters}, can be either a character or a string.
2402 The element says to give that character or characters the syntax
2403 specified by @var{syntax-description}, which is passed to
2404 @code{modify-syntax-entry} (@pxref{Syntax Table Functions}).
2405
2406 This feature is typically used to give word syntax to characters which
2407 normally have symbol syntax, and thus to simplify
2408 @code{imenu-generic-expression} and speed up matching.
2409 For example, Fortran mode uses it this way:
2410
2411 @example
2412 (setq imenu-syntax-alist '(("_$" . "w")))
2413 @end example
2414
2415 The @code{imenu-generic-expression} regular expressions can then use
2416 @samp{\\sw+} instead of @samp{\\(\\sw\\|\\s_\\)+}. Note that this
2417 technique may be inconvenient when the mode needs to limit the initial
2418 character of a name to a smaller set of characters than are allowed in
2419 the rest of a name.
2420
2421 Setting this variable makes it buffer-local in the current buffer.
2422 @end defvar
2423
2424 Another way to customize Imenu for a major mode is to set the
2425 variables @code{imenu-prev-index-position-function} and
2426 @code{imenu-extract-index-name-function}:
2427
2428 @defvar imenu-prev-index-position-function
2429 If this variable is non-@code{nil}, its value should be a function that
2430 finds the next ``definition'' to put in the buffer index, scanning
2431 backward in the buffer from point. It should return @code{nil} if it
2432 doesn't find another ``definition'' before point. Otherwise it should
2433 leave point at the place it finds a ``definition'' and return any
2434 non-@code{nil} value.
2435
2436 Setting this variable makes it buffer-local in the current buffer.
2437 @end defvar
2438
2439 @defvar imenu-extract-index-name-function
2440 If this variable is non-@code{nil}, its value should be a function to
2441 return the name for a definition, assuming point is in that definition
2442 as the @code{imenu-prev-index-position-function} function would leave
2443 it.
2444
2445 Setting this variable makes it buffer-local in the current buffer.
2446 @end defvar
2447
2448 The last way to customize Imenu for a major mode is to set the
2449 variable @code{imenu-create-index-function}:
2450
2451 @defvar imenu-create-index-function
2452 This variable specifies the function to use for creating a buffer
2453 index. The function should take no arguments, and return an index
2454 alist for the current buffer. It is called within
2455 @code{save-excursion}, so where it leaves point makes no difference.
2456
2457 The index alist can have three types of elements. Simple elements
2458 look like this:
2459
2460 @example
2461 (@var{index-name} . @var{index-position})
2462 @end example
2463
2464 Selecting a simple element has the effect of moving to position
2465 @var{index-position} in the buffer. Special elements look like this:
2466
2467 @example
2468 (@var{index-name} @var{index-position} @var{function} @var{arguments}@dots{})
2469 @end example
2470
2471 Selecting a special element performs:
2472
2473 @example
2474 (funcall @var{function}
2475 @var{index-name} @var{index-position} @var{arguments}@dots{})
2476 @end example
2477
2478 A nested sub-alist element looks like this:
2479
2480 @example
2481 (@var{menu-title} @var{sub-alist})
2482 @end example
2483
2484 It creates the submenu @var{menu-title} specified by @var{sub-alist}.
2485
2486 The default value of @code{imenu-create-index-function} is
2487 @code{imenu-default-create-index-function}. This function calls the
2488 value of @code{imenu-prev-index-position-function} and the value of
2489 @code{imenu-extract-index-name-function} to produce the index alist.
2490 However, if either of these two variables is @code{nil}, the default
2491 function uses @code{imenu-generic-expression} instead.
2492
2493 Setting this variable makes it buffer-local in the current buffer.
2494 @end defvar
2495
2496 @node Font Lock Mode
2497 @section Font Lock Mode
2498 @cindex Font Lock mode
2499
2500 @dfn{Font Lock mode} is a buffer-local minor mode that automatically
2501 attaches @code{face} properties to certain parts of the buffer based on
2502 their syntactic role. How it parses the buffer depends on the major
2503 mode; most major modes define syntactic criteria for which faces to use
2504 in which contexts. This section explains how to customize Font Lock for
2505 a particular major mode.
2506
2507 Font Lock mode finds text to highlight in two ways: through
2508 syntactic parsing based on the syntax table, and through searching
2509 (usually for regular expressions). Syntactic fontification happens
2510 first; it finds comments and string constants and highlights them.
2511 Search-based fontification happens second.
2512
2513 @menu
2514 * Font Lock Basics:: Overview of customizing Font Lock.
2515 * Search-based Fontification:: Fontification based on regexps.
2516 * Customizing Keywords:: Customizing search-based fontification.
2517 * Other Font Lock Variables:: Additional customization facilities.
2518 * Levels of Font Lock:: Each mode can define alternative levels
2519 so that the user can select more or less.
2520 * Precalculated Fontification:: How Lisp programs that produce the buffer
2521 contents can also specify how to fontify it.
2522 * Faces for Font Lock:: Special faces specifically for Font Lock.
2523 * Syntactic Font Lock:: Fontification based on syntax tables.
2524 * Multiline Font Lock:: How to coerce Font Lock into properly
2525 highlighting multiline constructs.
2526 @end menu
2527
2528 @node Font Lock Basics
2529 @subsection Font Lock Basics
2530
2531 There are several variables that control how Font Lock mode highlights
2532 text. But major modes should not set any of these variables directly.
2533 Instead, they should set @code{font-lock-defaults} as a buffer-local
2534 variable. The value assigned to this variable is used, if and when Font
2535 Lock mode is enabled, to set all the other variables.
2536
2537 @defvar font-lock-defaults
2538 This variable is set by major modes to specify how to fontify text in
2539 that mode. It automatically becomes buffer-local when set. If its
2540 value is @code{nil}, Font Lock mode does no highlighting, and you can
2541 use the @samp{Faces} menu (under @samp{Edit} and then @samp{Text
2542 Properties} in the menu bar) to assign faces explicitly to text in the
2543 buffer.
2544
2545 If non-@code{nil}, the value should look like this:
2546
2547 @example
2548 (@var{keywords} [@var{keywords-only} [@var{case-fold}
2549 [@var{syntax-alist} [@var{syntax-begin} @var{other-vars}@dots{}]]]])
2550 @end example
2551
2552 The first element, @var{keywords}, indirectly specifies the value of
2553 @code{font-lock-keywords} which directs search-based fontification.
2554 It can be a symbol, a variable or a function whose value is the list
2555 to use for @code{font-lock-keywords}. It can also be a list of
2556 several such symbols, one for each possible level of fontification.
2557 The first symbol specifies the @samp{mode default} level of
2558 fontification, the next symbol level 1 fontification, the next level 2,
2559 and so on. The @samp{mode default} level is normally the same as level
2560 1. It is used when @code{font-lock-maximum-decoration} has a @code{nil}
2561 value. @xref{Levels of Font Lock}.
2562
2563 The second element, @var{keywords-only}, specifies the value of the
2564 variable @code{font-lock-keywords-only}. If this is omitted or
2565 @code{nil}, syntactic fontification (of strings and comments) is also
2566 performed. If this is non-@code{nil}, syntactic fontification is not
2567 performed. @xref{Syntactic Font Lock}.
2568
2569 The third element, @var{case-fold}, specifies the value of
2570 @code{font-lock-keywords-case-fold-search}. If it is non-@code{nil},
2571 Font Lock mode ignores case during search-based fontification.
2572
2573 If the fourth element, @var{syntax-alist}, is non-@code{nil}, it should
2574 be a list of cons cells of the form @code{(@var{char-or-string}
2575 . @var{string})}. These are used to set up a syntax table for syntactic
2576 fontification; the resulting syntax table is stored in
2577 @code{font-lock-syntax-table}. If @var{syntax-alist} is omitted or
2578 @code{nil}, syntactic fontification uses the syntax table returned by
2579 the @code{syntax-table} function. @xref{Syntax Table Functions}.
2580
2581 The fifth element, @var{syntax-begin}, specifies the value of
2582 @code{font-lock-beginning-of-syntax-function}. We recommend setting
2583 this variable to @code{nil} and using @code{syntax-begin-function}
2584 instead.
2585
2586 All the remaining elements (if any) are collectively called
2587 @var{other-vars}. Each of these elements should have the form
2588 @code{(@var{variable} . @var{value})}---which means, make
2589 @var{variable} buffer-local and then set it to @var{value}. You can
2590 use these @var{other-vars} to set other variables that affect
2591 fontification, aside from those you can control with the first five
2592 elements. @xref{Other Font Lock Variables}.
2593 @end defvar
2594
2595 If your mode fontifies text explicitly by adding
2596 @code{font-lock-face} properties, it can specify @code{(nil t)} for
2597 @code{font-lock-defaults} to turn off all automatic fontification.
2598 However, this is not required; it is possible to fontify some things
2599 using @code{font-lock-face} properties and set up automatic
2600 fontification for other parts of the text.
2601
2602 @node Search-based Fontification
2603 @subsection Search-based Fontification
2604
2605 The variable which directly controls search-based fontification is
2606 @code{font-lock-keywords}, which is typically specified via the
2607 @var{keywords} element in @code{font-lock-defaults}.
2608
2609 @defvar font-lock-keywords
2610 The value of this variable is a list of the keywords to highlight. Lisp
2611 programs should not set this variable directly. Normally, the value is
2612 automatically set by Font Lock mode, using the @var{keywords} element in
2613 @code{font-lock-defaults}. The value can also be altered using the
2614 functions @code{font-lock-add-keywords} and
2615 @code{font-lock-remove-keywords} (@pxref{Customizing Keywords}).
2616 @end defvar
2617
2618 Each element of @code{font-lock-keywords} specifies how to find
2619 certain cases of text, and how to highlight those cases. Font Lock mode
2620 processes the elements of @code{font-lock-keywords} one by one, and for
2621 each element, it finds and handles all matches. Ordinarily, once
2622 part of the text has been fontified already, this cannot be overridden
2623 by a subsequent match in the same text; but you can specify different
2624 behavior using the @var{override} element of a @var{subexp-highlighter}.
2625
2626 Each element of @code{font-lock-keywords} should have one of these
2627 forms:
2628
2629 @table @code
2630 @item @var{regexp}
2631 Highlight all matches for @var{regexp} using
2632 @code{font-lock-keyword-face}. For example,
2633
2634 @example
2635 ;; @r{Highlight occurrences of the word @samp{foo}}
2636 ;; @r{using @code{font-lock-keyword-face}.}
2637 "\\<foo\\>"
2638 @end example
2639
2640 Be careful when composing these regular expressions; a poorly written
2641 pattern can dramatically slow things down! The function
2642 @code{regexp-opt} (@pxref{Regexp Functions}) is useful for calculating
2643 optimal regular expressions to match several keywords.
2644
2645 @item @var{function}
2646 Find text by calling @var{function}, and highlight the matches
2647 it finds using @code{font-lock-keyword-face}.
2648
2649 When @var{function} is called, it receives one argument, the limit of
2650 the search; it should begin searching at point, and not search beyond the
2651 limit. It should return non-@code{nil} if it succeeds, and set the
2652 match data to describe the match that was found. Returning @code{nil}
2653 indicates failure of the search.
2654
2655 Fontification will call @var{function} repeatedly with the same limit,
2656 and with point where the previous invocation left it, until
2657 @var{function} fails. On failure, @var{function} need not reset point
2658 in any particular way.
2659
2660 @item (@var{matcher} . @var{subexp})
2661 In this kind of element, @var{matcher} is either a regular
2662 expression or a function, as described above. The @sc{cdr},
2663 @var{subexp}, specifies which subexpression of @var{matcher} should be
2664 highlighted (instead of the entire text that @var{matcher} matched).
2665
2666 @example
2667 ;; @r{Highlight the @samp{bar} in each occurrence of @samp{fubar},}
2668 ;; @r{using @code{font-lock-keyword-face}.}
2669 ("fu\\(bar\\)" . 1)
2670 @end example
2671
2672 If you use @code{regexp-opt} to produce the regular expression
2673 @var{matcher}, you can use @code{regexp-opt-depth} (@pxref{Regexp
2674 Functions}) to calculate the value for @var{subexp}.
2675
2676 @item (@var{matcher} . @var{facespec})
2677 In this kind of element, @var{facespec} is an expression whose value
2678 specifies the face to use for highlighting. In the simplest case,
2679 @var{facespec} is a Lisp variable (a symbol) whose value is a face
2680 name.
2681
2682 @example
2683 ;; @r{Highlight occurrences of @samp{fubar},}
2684 ;; @r{using the face which is the value of @code{fubar-face}.}
2685 ("fubar" . fubar-face)
2686 @end example
2687
2688 However, @var{facespec} can also evaluate to a list of this form:
2689
2690 @example
2691 (face @var{face} @var{prop1} @var{val1} @var{prop2} @var{val2}@dots{})
2692 @end example
2693
2694 @noindent
2695 to specify the face @var{face} and various additional text properties
2696 to put on the text that matches. If you do this, be sure to add the
2697 other text property names that you set in this way to the value of
2698 @code{font-lock-extra-managed-props} so that the properties will also
2699 be cleared out when they are no longer appropriate. Alternatively,
2700 you can set the variable @code{font-lock-unfontify-region-function} to
2701 a function that clears these properties. @xref{Other Font Lock
2702 Variables}.
2703
2704 @item (@var{matcher} . @var{subexp-highlighter})
2705 In this kind of element, @var{subexp-highlighter} is a list
2706 which specifies how to highlight matches found by @var{matcher}.
2707 It has the form:
2708
2709 @example
2710 (@var{subexp} @var{facespec} [@var{override} [@var{laxmatch}]])
2711 @end example
2712
2713 The @sc{car}, @var{subexp}, is an integer specifying which subexpression
2714 of the match to fontify (0 means the entire matching text). The second
2715 subelement, @var{facespec}, is an expression whose value specifies the
2716 face, as described above.
2717
2718 The last two values in @var{subexp-highlighter}, @var{override} and
2719 @var{laxmatch}, are optional flags. If @var{override} is @code{t},
2720 this element can override existing fontification made by previous
2721 elements of @code{font-lock-keywords}. If it is @code{keep}, then
2722 each character is fontified if it has not been fontified already by
2723 some other element. If it is @code{prepend}, the face specified by
2724 @var{facespec} is added to the beginning of the @code{font-lock-face}
2725 property. If it is @code{append}, the face is added to the end of the
2726 @code{font-lock-face} property.
2727
2728 If @var{laxmatch} is non-@code{nil}, it means there should be no error
2729 if there is no subexpression numbered @var{subexp} in @var{matcher}.
2730 Obviously, fontification of the subexpression numbered @var{subexp} will
2731 not occur. However, fontification of other subexpressions (and other
2732 regexps) will continue. If @var{laxmatch} is @code{nil}, and the
2733 specified subexpression is missing, then an error is signaled which
2734 terminates search-based fontification.
2735
2736 Here are some examples of elements of this kind, and what they do:
2737
2738 @smallexample
2739 ;; @r{Highlight occurrences of either @samp{foo} or @samp{bar}, using}
2740 ;; @r{@code{foo-bar-face}, even if they have already been highlighted.}
2741 ;; @r{@code{foo-bar-face} should be a variable whose value is a face.}
2742 ("foo\\|bar" 0 foo-bar-face t)
2743
2744 ;; @r{Highlight the first subexpression within each occurrence}
2745 ;; @r{that the function @code{fubar-match} finds,}
2746 ;; @r{using the face which is the value of @code{fubar-face}.}
2747 (fubar-match 1 fubar-face)
2748 @end smallexample
2749
2750 @item (@var{matcher} . @var{anchored-highlighter})
2751 In this kind of element, @var{anchored-highlighter} specifies how to
2752 highlight text that follows a match found by @var{matcher}. So a
2753 match found by @var{matcher} acts as the anchor for further searches
2754 specified by @var{anchored-highlighter}. @var{anchored-highlighter}
2755 is a list of the following form:
2756
2757 @example
2758 (@var{anchored-matcher} @var{pre-form} @var{post-form}
2759 @var{subexp-highlighters}@dots{})
2760 @end example
2761
2762 Here, @var{anchored-matcher}, like @var{matcher}, is either a regular
2763 expression or a function. After a match of @var{matcher} is found,
2764 point is at the end of the match. Now, Font Lock evaluates the form
2765 @var{pre-form}. Then it searches for matches of
2766 @var{anchored-matcher} and uses @var{subexp-highlighters} to highlight
2767 these. A @var{subexp-highlighter} is as described above. Finally,
2768 Font Lock evaluates @var{post-form}.
2769
2770 The forms @var{pre-form} and @var{post-form} can be used to initialize
2771 before, and cleanup after, @var{anchored-matcher} is used. Typically,
2772 @var{pre-form} is used to move point to some position relative to the
2773 match of @var{matcher}, before starting with @var{anchored-matcher}.
2774 @var{post-form} might be used to move back, before resuming with
2775 @var{matcher}.
2776
2777 After Font Lock evaluates @var{pre-form}, it does not search for
2778 @var{anchored-matcher} beyond the end of the line. However, if
2779 @var{pre-form} returns a buffer position that is greater than the
2780 position of point after @var{pre-form} is evaluated, then the position
2781 returned by @var{pre-form} is used as the limit of the search instead.
2782 It is generally a bad idea to return a position greater than the end
2783 of the line; in other words, the @var{anchored-matcher} search should
2784 not span lines.
2785
2786 For example,
2787
2788 @smallexample
2789 ;; @r{Highlight occurrences of the word @samp{item} following}
2790 ;; @r{an occurrence of the word @samp{anchor} (on the same line)}
2791 ;; @r{in the value of @code{item-face}.}
2792 ("\\<anchor\\>" "\\<item\\>" nil nil (0 item-face))
2793 @end smallexample
2794
2795 Here, @var{pre-form} and @var{post-form} are @code{nil}. Therefore
2796 searching for @samp{item} starts at the end of the match of
2797 @samp{anchor}, and searching for subsequent instances of @samp{anchor}
2798 resumes from where searching for @samp{item} concluded.
2799
2800 @item (@var{matcher} @var{highlighters}@dots{})
2801 This sort of element specifies several @var{highlighter} lists for a
2802 single @var{matcher}. A @var{highlighter} list can be of the type
2803 @var{subexp-highlighter} or @var{anchored-highlighter} as described
2804 above.
2805
2806 For example,
2807
2808 @smallexample
2809 ;; @r{Highlight occurrences of the word @samp{anchor} in the value}
2810 ;; @r{of @code{anchor-face}, and subsequent occurrences of the word}
2811 ;; @r{@samp{item} (on the same line) in the value of @code{item-face}.}
2812 ("\\<anchor\\>" (0 anchor-face)
2813 ("\\<item\\>" nil nil (0 item-face)))
2814 @end smallexample
2815
2816 @item (eval . @var{form})
2817 Here @var{form} is an expression to be evaluated the first time
2818 this value of @code{font-lock-keywords} is used in a buffer.
2819 Its value should have one of the forms described in this table.
2820 @end table
2821
2822 @strong{Warning:} Do not design an element of @code{font-lock-keywords}
2823 to match text which spans lines; this does not work reliably.
2824 For details, see @xref{Multiline Font Lock}.
2825
2826 You can use @var{case-fold} in @code{font-lock-defaults} to specify
2827 the value of @code{font-lock-keywords-case-fold-search} which says
2828 whether search-based fontification should be case-insensitive.
2829
2830 @defvar font-lock-keywords-case-fold-search
2831 Non-@code{nil} means that regular expression matching for the sake of
2832 @code{font-lock-keywords} should be case-insensitive.
2833 @end defvar
2834
2835 @node Customizing Keywords
2836 @subsection Customizing Search-Based Fontification
2837
2838 You can use @code{font-lock-add-keywords} to add additional
2839 search-based fontification rules to a major mode, and
2840 @code{font-lock-remove-keywords} to remove rules.
2841
2842 @defun font-lock-add-keywords mode keywords &optional how
2843 This function adds highlighting @var{keywords}, for the current buffer
2844 or for major mode @var{mode}. The argument @var{keywords} should be a
2845 list with the same format as the variable @code{font-lock-keywords}.
2846
2847 If @var{mode} is a symbol which is a major mode command name, such as
2848 @code{c-mode}, the effect is that enabling Font Lock mode in
2849 @var{mode} will add @var{keywords} to @code{font-lock-keywords}.
2850 Calling with a non-@code{nil} value of @var{mode} is correct only in
2851 your @file{~/.emacs} file.
2852
2853 If @var{mode} is @code{nil}, this function adds @var{keywords} to
2854 @code{font-lock-keywords} in the current buffer. This way of calling
2855 @code{font-lock-add-keywords} is usually used in mode hook functions.
2856
2857 By default, @var{keywords} are added at the beginning of
2858 @code{font-lock-keywords}. If the optional argument @var{how} is
2859 @code{set}, they are used to replace the value of
2860 @code{font-lock-keywords}. If @var{how} is any other non-@code{nil}
2861 value, they are added at the end of @code{font-lock-keywords}.
2862
2863 Some modes provide specialized support you can use in additional
2864 highlighting patterns. See the variables
2865 @code{c-font-lock-extra-types}, @code{c++-font-lock-extra-types},
2866 and @code{java-font-lock-extra-types}, for example.
2867
2868 @strong{Warning:} Major mode commands must not call
2869 @code{font-lock-add-keywords} under any circumstances, either directly
2870 or indirectly, except through their mode hooks. (Doing so would lead to
2871 incorrect behavior for some minor modes.) They should set up their
2872 rules for search-based fontification by setting
2873 @code{font-lock-keywords}.
2874 @end defun
2875
2876 @defun font-lock-remove-keywords mode keywords
2877 This function removes @var{keywords} from @code{font-lock-keywords}
2878 for the current buffer or for major mode @var{mode}. As in
2879 @code{font-lock-add-keywords}, @var{mode} should be a major mode
2880 command name or @code{nil}. All the caveats and requirements for
2881 @code{font-lock-add-keywords} apply here too.
2882 @end defun
2883
2884 For example, the following code adds two fontification patterns for C
2885 mode: one to fontify the word @samp{FIXME}, even in comments, and
2886 another to fontify the words @samp{and}, @samp{or} and @samp{not} as
2887 keywords.
2888
2889 @smallexample
2890 (font-lock-add-keywords 'c-mode
2891 '(("\\<\\(FIXME\\):" 1 font-lock-warning-face prepend)
2892 ("\\<\\(and\\|or\\|not\\)\\>" . font-lock-keyword-face)))
2893 @end smallexample
2894
2895 @noindent
2896 This example affects only C mode proper. To add the same patterns to C
2897 mode @emph{and} all modes derived from it, do this instead:
2898
2899 @smallexample
2900 (add-hook 'c-mode-hook
2901 (lambda ()
2902 (font-lock-add-keywords nil
2903 '(("\\<\\(FIXME\\):" 1 font-lock-warning-face prepend)
2904 ("\\<\\(and\\|or\\|not\\)\\>" .
2905 font-lock-keyword-face)))))
2906 @end smallexample
2907
2908 @node Other Font Lock Variables
2909 @subsection Other Font Lock Variables
2910
2911 This section describes additional variables that a major mode can
2912 set by means of @var{other-vars} in @code{font-lock-defaults}
2913 (@pxref{Font Lock Basics}).
2914
2915 @defvar font-lock-mark-block-function
2916 If this variable is non-@code{nil}, it should be a function that is
2917 called with no arguments, to choose an enclosing range of text for
2918 refontification for the command @kbd{M-o M-o}
2919 (@code{font-lock-fontify-block}).
2920
2921 The function should report its choice by placing the region around it.
2922 A good choice is a range of text large enough to give proper results,
2923 but not too large so that refontification becomes slow. Typical values
2924 are @code{mark-defun} for programming modes or @code{mark-paragraph} for
2925 textual modes.
2926 @end defvar
2927
2928 @defvar font-lock-extra-managed-props
2929 This variable specifies additional properties (other than
2930 @code{font-lock-face}) that are being managed by Font Lock mode. It
2931 is used by @code{font-lock-default-unfontify-region}, which normally
2932 only manages the @code{font-lock-face} property. If you want Font
2933 Lock to manage other properties as well, you must specify them in a
2934 @var{facespec} in @code{font-lock-keywords} as well as add them to
2935 this list. @xref{Search-based Fontification}.
2936 @end defvar
2937
2938 @defvar font-lock-fontify-buffer-function
2939 Function to use for fontifying the buffer. The default value is
2940 @code{font-lock-default-fontify-buffer}.
2941 @end defvar
2942
2943 @defvar font-lock-unfontify-buffer-function
2944 Function to use for unfontifying the buffer. This is used when
2945 turning off Font Lock mode. The default value is
2946 @code{font-lock-default-unfontify-buffer}.
2947 @end defvar
2948
2949 @defvar font-lock-fontify-region-function
2950 Function to use for fontifying a region. It should take two
2951 arguments, the beginning and end of the region, and an optional third
2952 argument @var{verbose}. If @var{verbose} is non-@code{nil}, the
2953 function should print status messages. The default value is
2954 @code{font-lock-default-fontify-region}.
2955 @end defvar
2956
2957 @defvar font-lock-unfontify-region-function
2958 Function to use for unfontifying a region. It should take two
2959 arguments, the beginning and end of the region. The default value is
2960 @code{font-lock-default-unfontify-region}.
2961 @end defvar
2962
2963 @defun jit-lock-register function &optional contextual
2964 This function tells Font Lock mode to run the Lisp function
2965 @var{function} any time it has to fontify or refontify part of the
2966 current buffer. It calls @var{function} before calling the default
2967 fontification functions, and gives it two arguments, @var{start} and
2968 @var{end}, which specify the region to be fontified or refontified.
2969
2970 The optional argument @var{contextual}, if non-@code{nil}, forces Font
2971 Lock mode to always refontify a syntactically relevant part of the
2972 buffer, and not just the modified lines. This argument can usually be
2973 omitted.
2974 @end defun
2975
2976 @defun jit-lock-unregister function
2977 If @var{function} was previously registered as a fontification
2978 function using @code{jit-lock-register}, this function unregisters it.
2979 @end defun
2980
2981 @node Levels of Font Lock
2982 @subsection Levels of Font Lock
2983
2984 Some major modes offer three different levels of fontification. You
2985 can define multiple levels by using a list of symbols for @var{keywords}
2986 in @code{font-lock-defaults}. Each symbol specifies one level of
2987 fontification; it is up to the user to choose one of these levels,
2988 normally by setting @code{font-lock-maximum-decoration} (@pxref{Font
2989 Lock,,, emacs, the GNU Emacs Manual}). The chosen level's symbol value
2990 is used to initialize @code{font-lock-keywords}.
2991
2992 Here are the conventions for how to define the levels of
2993 fontification:
2994
2995 @itemize @bullet
2996 @item
2997 Level 1: highlight function declarations, file directives (such as include or
2998 import directives), strings and comments. The idea is speed, so only
2999 the most important and top-level components are fontified.
3000
3001 @item
3002 Level 2: in addition to level 1, highlight all language keywords,
3003 including type names that act like keywords, as well as named constant
3004 values. The idea is that all keywords (either syntactic or semantic)
3005 should be fontified appropriately.
3006
3007 @item
3008 Level 3: in addition to level 2, highlight the symbols being defined in
3009 function and variable declarations, and all builtin function names,
3010 wherever they appear.
3011 @end itemize
3012
3013 @node Precalculated Fontification
3014 @subsection Precalculated Fontification
3015
3016 Some major modes such as @code{list-buffers} and @code{occur}
3017 construct the buffer text programmatically. The easiest way for them
3018 to support Font Lock mode is to specify the faces of text when they
3019 insert the text in the buffer.
3020
3021 The way to do this is to specify the faces in the text with the
3022 special text property @code{font-lock-face} (@pxref{Special
3023 Properties}). When Font Lock mode is enabled, this property controls
3024 the display, just like the @code{face} property. When Font Lock mode
3025 is disabled, @code{font-lock-face} has no effect on the display.
3026
3027 It is ok for a mode to use @code{font-lock-face} for some text and
3028 also use the normal Font Lock machinery. But if the mode does not use
3029 the normal Font Lock machinery, it should not set the variable
3030 @code{font-lock-defaults}.
3031
3032 @node Faces for Font Lock
3033 @subsection Faces for Font Lock
3034 @cindex faces for font lock
3035 @cindex font lock faces
3036
3037 Font Lock mode can highlight using any face, but Emacs defines several
3038 faces specifically for Font Lock to use to highlight text. These
3039 @dfn{Font Lock faces} are listed below. They can also be used by major
3040 modes for syntactic highlighting outside of Font Lock mode (@pxref{Major
3041 Mode Conventions}).
3042
3043 Each of these symbols is both a face name, and a variable whose
3044 default value is the symbol itself. Thus, the default value of
3045 @code{font-lock-comment-face} is @code{font-lock-comment-face}.
3046
3047 The faces are listed with descriptions of their typical usage, and in
3048 order of greater to lesser ``prominence''. If a mode's syntactic
3049 categories do not fit well with the usage descriptions, the faces can be
3050 assigned using the ordering as a guide.
3051
3052 @table @code
3053 @item font-lock-warning-face
3054 @vindex font-lock-warning-face
3055 for a construct that is peculiar, or that greatly changes the meaning of
3056 other text, like @samp{;;;###autoload} in Emacs Lisp and @samp{#error}
3057 in C.
3058
3059 @item font-lock-function-name-face
3060 @vindex font-lock-function-name-face
3061 for the name of a function being defined or declared.
3062
3063 @item font-lock-variable-name-face
3064 @vindex font-lock-variable-name-face
3065 for the name of a variable being defined or declared.
3066
3067 @item font-lock-keyword-face
3068 @vindex font-lock-keyword-face
3069 for a keyword with special syntactic significance, like @samp{for} and
3070 @samp{if} in C.
3071
3072 @item font-lock-comment-face
3073 @vindex font-lock-comment-face
3074 for comments.
3075
3076 @item font-lock-comment-delimiter-face
3077 @vindex font-lock-comment-delimiter-face
3078 for comments delimiters, like @samp{/*} and @samp{*/} in C. On most
3079 terminals, this inherits from @code{font-lock-comment-face}.
3080
3081 @item font-lock-type-face
3082 @vindex font-lock-type-face
3083 for the names of user-defined data types.
3084
3085 @item font-lock-constant-face
3086 @vindex font-lock-constant-face
3087 for the names of constants, like @samp{NULL} in C.
3088
3089 @item font-lock-builtin-face
3090 @vindex font-lock-builtin-face
3091 for the names of built-in functions.
3092
3093 @item font-lock-preprocessor-face
3094 @vindex font-lock-preprocessor-face
3095 for preprocessor commands. This inherits, by default, from
3096 @code{font-lock-builtin-face}.
3097
3098 @item font-lock-string-face
3099 @vindex font-lock-string-face
3100 for string constants.
3101
3102 @item font-lock-doc-face
3103 @vindex font-lock-doc-face
3104 for documentation strings in the code. This inherits, by default, from
3105 @code{font-lock-string-face}.
3106
3107 @item font-lock-negation-char-face
3108 @vindex font-lock-negation-char-face
3109 for easily-overlooked negation characters.
3110 @end table
3111
3112 @node Syntactic Font Lock
3113 @subsection Syntactic Font Lock
3114 @cindex syntactic font lock
3115
3116 Syntactic fontification uses a syntax table (@pxref{Syntax Tables}) to
3117 find and highlight syntactically relevant text. If enabled, it runs
3118 prior to search-based fontification. The variable
3119 @code{font-lock-syntactic-face-function}, documented below, determines
3120 which syntactic constructs to highlight. There are several variables
3121 that affect syntactic fontification; you should set them by means of
3122 @code{font-lock-defaults} (@pxref{Font Lock Basics}).
3123
3124 Whenever Font Lock mode performs syntactic fontification on a stretch
3125 of text, it first calls the function specified by
3126 @code{syntax-propertize-function}. Major modes can use this to apply
3127 @code{syntax-table} text properties to override the buffer's syntax
3128 table in special cases. @xref{Syntax Properties}.
3129
3130 @defvar font-lock-keywords-only
3131 If the value of this variable is non-@code{nil}, Font Lock does not do
3132 syntactic fontification, only search-based fontification based on
3133 @code{font-lock-keywords}. It is normally set by Font Lock mode based
3134 on the @var{keywords-only} element in @code{font-lock-defaults}.
3135 @end defvar
3136
3137 @defvar font-lock-syntax-table
3138 This variable holds the syntax table to use for fontification of
3139 comments and strings. It is normally set by Font Lock mode based on the
3140 @var{syntax-alist} element in @code{font-lock-defaults}. If this value
3141 is @code{nil}, syntactic fontification uses the buffer's syntax table
3142 (the value returned by the function @code{syntax-table}; @pxref{Syntax
3143 Table Functions}).
3144 @end defvar
3145
3146 @defvar font-lock-beginning-of-syntax-function
3147 If this variable is non-@code{nil}, it should be a function to move
3148 point back to a position that is syntactically at ``top level'' and
3149 outside of strings or comments. The value is normally set through an
3150 @var{other-vars} element in @code{font-lock-defaults}. If it is
3151 @code{nil}, Font Lock uses @code{syntax-begin-function} to move back
3152 outside of any comment, string, or sexp (@pxref{Position Parse}).
3153
3154 This variable is semi-obsolete; we usually recommend setting
3155 @code{syntax-begin-function} instead. One of its uses is to tune the
3156 behavior of syntactic fontification, e.g.@: to ensure that different
3157 kinds of strings or comments are highlighted differently.
3158
3159 The specified function is called with no arguments. It should leave
3160 point at the beginning of any enclosing syntactic block. Typical values
3161 are @code{beginning-of-line} (used when the start of the line is known
3162 to be outside a syntactic block), or @code{beginning-of-defun} for
3163 programming modes, or @code{backward-paragraph} for textual modes.
3164 @end defvar
3165
3166 @defvar font-lock-syntactic-face-function
3167 If this variable is non-@code{nil}, it should be a function to determine
3168 which face to use for a given syntactic element (a string or a comment).
3169 The value is normally set through an @var{other-vars} element in
3170 @code{font-lock-defaults}.
3171
3172 The function is called with one argument, the parse state at point
3173 returned by @code{parse-partial-sexp}, and should return a face. The
3174 default value returns @code{font-lock-comment-face} for comments and
3175 @code{font-lock-string-face} for strings (@pxref{Faces for Font Lock}).
3176 @end defvar
3177
3178 @node Multiline Font Lock
3179 @subsection Multiline Font Lock Constructs
3180 @cindex multiline font lock
3181
3182 Normally, elements of @code{font-lock-keywords} should not match
3183 across multiple lines; that doesn't work reliably, because Font Lock
3184 usually scans just part of the buffer, and it can miss a multi-line
3185 construct that crosses the line boundary where the scan starts. (The
3186 scan normally starts at the beginning of a line.)
3187
3188 Making elements that match multiline constructs work properly has
3189 two aspects: correct @emph{identification} and correct
3190 @emph{rehighlighting}. The first means that Font Lock finds all
3191 multiline constructs. The second means that Font Lock will correctly
3192 rehighlight all the relevant text when a multiline construct is
3193 changed---for example, if some of the text that was previously part of
3194 a multiline construct ceases to be part of it. The two aspects are
3195 closely related, and often getting one of them to work will appear to
3196 make the other also work. However, for reliable results you must
3197 attend explicitly to both aspects.
3198
3199 There are three ways to ensure correct identification of multiline
3200 constructs:
3201
3202 @itemize
3203 @item
3204 Add a function to @code{font-lock-extend-region-functions} that does
3205 the @emph{identification} and extends the scan so that the scanned
3206 text never starts or ends in the middle of a multiline construct.
3207 @item
3208 Use the @code{font-lock-fontify-region-function} hook similarly to
3209 extend the scan so that the scanned text never starts or ends in the
3210 middle of a multiline construct.
3211 @item
3212 Somehow identify the multiline construct right when it gets inserted
3213 into the buffer (or at any point after that but before font-lock
3214 tries to highlight it), and mark it with a @code{font-lock-multiline}
3215 which will instruct font-lock not to start or end the scan in the
3216 middle of the construct.
3217 @end itemize
3218
3219 There are three ways to do rehighlighting of multiline constructs:
3220
3221 @itemize
3222 @item
3223 Place a @code{font-lock-multiline} property on the construct. This
3224 will rehighlight the whole construct if any part of it is changed. In
3225 some cases you can do this automatically by setting the
3226 @code{font-lock-multiline} variable, which see.
3227 @item
3228 Make sure @code{jit-lock-contextually} is set and rely on it doing its
3229 job. This will only rehighlight the part of the construct that
3230 follows the actual change, and will do it after a short delay.
3231 This only works if the highlighting of the various parts of your
3232 multiline construct never depends on text in subsequent lines.
3233 Since @code{jit-lock-contextually} is activated by default, this can
3234 be an attractive solution.
3235 @item
3236 Place a @code{jit-lock-defer-multiline} property on the construct.
3237 This works only if @code{jit-lock-contextually} is used, and with the
3238 same delay before rehighlighting, but like @code{font-lock-multiline},
3239 it also handles the case where highlighting depends on
3240 subsequent lines.
3241 @end itemize
3242
3243 @menu
3244 * Font Lock Multiline:: Marking multiline chunks with a text property.
3245 * Region to Refontify:: Controlling which region gets refontified
3246 after a buffer change.
3247 @end menu
3248
3249 @node Font Lock Multiline
3250 @subsubsection Font Lock Multiline
3251
3252 One way to ensure reliable rehighlighting of multiline Font Lock
3253 constructs is to put on them the text property @code{font-lock-multiline}.
3254 It should be present and non-@code{nil} for text that is part of a
3255 multiline construct.
3256
3257 When Font Lock is about to highlight a range of text, it first
3258 extends the boundaries of the range as necessary so that they do not
3259 fall within text marked with the @code{font-lock-multiline} property.
3260 Then it removes any @code{font-lock-multiline} properties from the
3261 range, and highlights it. The highlighting specification (mostly
3262 @code{font-lock-keywords}) must reinstall this property each time,
3263 whenever it is appropriate.
3264
3265 @strong{Warning:} don't use the @code{font-lock-multiline} property
3266 on large ranges of text, because that will make rehighlighting slow.
3267
3268 @defvar font-lock-multiline
3269 If the @code{font-lock-multiline} variable is set to @code{t}, Font
3270 Lock will try to add the @code{font-lock-multiline} property
3271 automatically on multiline constructs. This is not a universal
3272 solution, however, since it slows down Font Lock somewhat. It can
3273 miss some multiline constructs, or make the property larger or smaller
3274 than necessary.
3275
3276 For elements whose @var{matcher} is a function, the function should
3277 ensure that submatch 0 covers the whole relevant multiline construct,
3278 even if only a small subpart will be highlighted. It is often just as
3279 easy to add the @code{font-lock-multiline} property by hand.
3280 @end defvar
3281
3282 The @code{font-lock-multiline} property is meant to ensure proper
3283 refontification; it does not automatically identify new multiline
3284 constructs. Identifying the requires that Font Lock mode operate on
3285 large enough chunks at a time. This will happen by accident on many
3286 cases, which may give the impression that multiline constructs magically
3287 work. If you set the @code{font-lock-multiline} variable
3288 non-@code{nil}, this impression will be even stronger, since the
3289 highlighting of those constructs which are found will be properly
3290 updated from then on. But that does not work reliably.
3291
3292 To find multiline constructs reliably, you must either manually place
3293 the @code{font-lock-multiline} property on the text before Font Lock
3294 mode looks at it, or use @code{font-lock-fontify-region-function}.
3295
3296 @node Region to Refontify
3297 @subsubsection Region to Fontify after a Buffer Change
3298
3299 When a buffer is changed, the region that Font Lock refontifies is
3300 by default the smallest sequence of whole lines that spans the change.
3301 While this works well most of the time, sometimes it doesn't---for
3302 example, when a change alters the syntactic meaning of text on an
3303 earlier line.
3304
3305 You can enlarge (or even reduce) the region to refontify by setting
3306 the following variable:
3307
3308 @defvar font-lock-extend-after-change-region-function
3309 This buffer-local variable is either @code{nil} or a function for Font
3310 Lock mode to call to determine the region to scan and fontify.
3311
3312 The function is given three parameters, the standard @var{beg},
3313 @var{end}, and @var{old-len} from @code{after-change-functions}
3314 (@pxref{Change Hooks}). It should return either a cons of the
3315 beginning and end buffer positions (in that order) of the region to
3316 fontify, or @code{nil} (which means choose the region in the standard
3317 way). This function needs to preserve point, the match-data, and the
3318 current restriction. The region it returns may start or end in the
3319 middle of a line.
3320
3321 Since this function is called after every buffer change, it should be
3322 reasonably fast.
3323 @end defvar
3324
3325 @node Auto-Indentation
3326 @section Automatic Indentation of code
3327
3328 For programming languages, an important feature of a major mode is to
3329 provide automatic indentation. This is controlled in Emacs by
3330 @code{indent-line-function} (@pxref{Mode-Specific Indent}).
3331 Writing a good indentation function can be difficult and to a large
3332 extent it is still a black art.
3333
3334 Many major mode authors will start by writing a simple indentation
3335 function that works for simple cases, for example by comparing with the
3336 indentation of the previous text line. For most programming languages
3337 that are not really line-based, this tends to scale very poorly:
3338 improving such a function to let it handle more diverse situations tends
3339 to become more and more difficult, resulting in the end with a large,
3340 complex, unmaintainable indentation function which nobody dares to touch.
3341
3342 A good indentation function will usually need to actually parse the
3343 text, according to the syntax of the language. Luckily, it is not
3344 necessary to parse the text in as much detail as would be needed
3345 for a compiler, but on the other hand, the parser embedded in the
3346 indentation code will want to be somewhat friendly to syntactically
3347 incorrect code.
3348
3349 Good maintainable indentation functions usually fall into two categories:
3350 either parsing forward from some ``safe'' starting point until the
3351 position of interest, or parsing backward from the position of interest.
3352 Neither of the two is a clearly better choice than the other: parsing
3353 backward is often more difficult than parsing forward because
3354 programming languages are designed to be parsed forward, but for the
3355 purpose of indentation it has the advantage of not needing to
3356 guess a ``safe'' starting point, and it generally enjoys the property
3357 that only a minimum of text will be analyzed to decide the indentation
3358 of a line, so indentation will tend to be unaffected by syntax errors in
3359 some earlier unrelated piece of code. Parsing forward on the other hand
3360 is usually easier and has the advantage of making it possible to
3361 reindent efficiently a whole region at a time, with a single parse.
3362
3363 Rather than write your own indentation function from scratch, it is
3364 often preferable to try and reuse some existing ones or to rely
3365 on a generic indentation engine. There are sadly few such
3366 engines. The CC-mode indentation code (used with C, C++, Java, Awk
3367 and a few other such modes) has been made more generic over the years,
3368 so if your language seems somewhat similar to one of those languages,
3369 you might try to use that engine. @c FIXME: documentation?
3370 Another one is SMIE which takes an approach in the spirit
3371 of Lisp sexps and adapts it to non-Lisp languages.
3372
3373 @menu
3374 * SMIE:: A simple minded indentation engine
3375 @end menu
3376
3377 @node SMIE
3378 @subsection Simple Minded Indentation Engine
3379
3380 SMIE is a package that provides a generic navigation and indentation
3381 engine. Based on a very simple parser using an ``operator precedence
3382 grammar'', it lets major modes extend the sexp-based navigation of Lisp
3383 to non-Lisp languages as well as provide a simple to use but reliable
3384 auto-indentation.
3385
3386 Operator precedence grammar is a very primitive technology for parsing
3387 compared to some of the more common techniques used in compilers.
3388 It has the following characteristics: its parsing power is very limited,
3389 and it is largely unable to detect syntax errors, but it has the
3390 advantage of being algorithmically efficient and able to parse forward
3391 just as well as backward. In practice that means that SMIE can use it
3392 for indentation based on backward parsing, that it can provide both
3393 @code{forward-sexp} and @code{backward-sexp} functionality, and that it
3394 will naturally work on syntactically incorrect code without any extra
3395 effort. The downside is that it also means that most programming
3396 languages cannot be parsed correctly using SMIE, at least not without
3397 resorting to some special tricks (@pxref{SMIE Tricks}).
3398
3399 @menu
3400 * SMIE setup:: SMIE setup and features
3401 * Operator Precedence Grammars:: A very simple parsing technique
3402 * SMIE Grammar:: Defining the grammar of a language
3403 * SMIE Lexer:: Defining tokens
3404 * SMIE Tricks:: Working around the parser's limitations
3405 * SMIE Indentation:: Specifying indentation rules
3406 * SMIE Indentation Helpers:: Helper functions for indentation rules
3407 * SMIE Indentation Example:: Sample indentation rules
3408 @end menu
3409
3410 @node SMIE setup
3411 @subsubsection SMIE Setup and Features
3412
3413 SMIE is meant to be a one-stop shop for structural navigation and
3414 various other features which rely on the syntactic structure of code, in
3415 particular automatic indentation. The main entry point is
3416 @code{smie-setup} which is a function typically called while setting
3417 up a major mode.
3418
3419 @defun smie-setup grammar rules-function &rest keywords
3420 Setup SMIE navigation and indentation.
3421 @var{grammar} is a grammar table generated by @code{smie-prec2->grammar}.
3422 @var{rules-function} is a set of indentation rules for use on
3423 @code{smie-rules-function}.
3424 @var{keywords} are additional arguments, which can include the following
3425 keywords:
3426 @itemize
3427 @item
3428 @code{:forward-token} @var{fun}: Specify the forward lexer to use.
3429 @item
3430 @code{:backward-token} @var{fun}: Specify the backward lexer to use.
3431 @end itemize
3432 @end defun
3433
3434 Calling this function is sufficient to make commands such as
3435 @code{forward-sexp}, @code{backward-sexp}, and @code{transpose-sexps} be
3436 able to properly handle structural elements other than just the paired
3437 parentheses already handled by syntax tables. For example, if the
3438 provided grammar is precise enough, @code{transpose-sexps} can correctly
3439 transpose the two arguments of a @code{+} operator, taking into account
3440 the precedence rules of the language.
3441
3442 Calling `smie-setup' is also sufficient to make TAB indentation work in
3443 the expected way, extends @code{blink-matching-paren} to apply to
3444 elements like @code{begin...end}, and provides some commands that you
3445 can bind in the major mode keymap.
3446
3447 @deffn Command smie-close-block
3448 This command closes the most recently opened (and not yet closed) block.
3449 @end deffn
3450
3451 @deffn Command smie-down-list &optional arg
3452 This command is like @code{down-list} but it also pays attention to
3453 nesting of tokens other than parentheses, such as @code{begin...end}.
3454 @end deffn
3455
3456 @node Operator Precedence Grammars
3457 @subsubsection Operator Precedence Grammars
3458
3459 SMIE's precedence grammars simply give to each token a pair of
3460 precedences: the left-precedence and the right-precedence. We say
3461 @code{T1 < T2} if the right-precedence of token @code{T1} is less than
3462 the left-precedence of token @code{T2}. A good way to read this
3463 @code{<} is as a kind of parenthesis: if we find @code{... T1 something
3464 T2 ...} then that should be parsed as @code{... T1 (something T2 ...}
3465 rather than as @code{... T1 something) T2 ...}. The latter
3466 interpretation would be the case if we had @code{T1 > T2}. If we have
3467 @code{T1 = T2}, it means that token T2 follows token T1 in the same
3468 syntactic construction, so typically we have @code{"begin" = "end"}.
3469 Such pairs of precedences are sufficient to express left-associativity
3470 or right-associativity of infix operators, nesting of tokens like
3471 parentheses and many other cases.
3472
3473 @c Let's leave this undocumented to leave it more open for change!
3474 @c @defvar smie-grammar
3475 @c The value of this variable is an alist specifying the left and right
3476 @c precedence of each token. It is meant to be initialized by using one of
3477 @c the functions below.
3478 @c @end defvar
3479
3480 @defun smie-prec2->grammar table
3481 This function takes a @emph{prec2} grammar @var{table} and returns an
3482 alist suitable for use in @code{smie-setup}. The @emph{prec2}
3483 @var{table} is itself meant to be built by one of the functions below.
3484 @end defun
3485
3486 @defun smie-merge-prec2s &rest tables
3487 This function takes several @emph{prec2} @var{tables} and merges them
3488 into a new @emph{prec2} table.
3489 @end defun
3490
3491 @defun smie-precs->prec2 precs
3492 This function builds a @emph{prec2} table from a table of precedences
3493 @var{precs}. @var{precs} should be a list, sorted by precedence (for
3494 example @code{"+"} will come before @code{"*"}), of elements of the form
3495 @code{(@var{assoc} @var{op} ...)}, where each @var{op} is a token that
3496 acts as an operator; @var{assoc} is their associativity, which can be
3497 either @code{left}, @code{right}, @code{assoc}, or @code{nonassoc}.
3498 All operators in a given element share the same precedence level
3499 and associativity.
3500 @end defun
3501
3502 @defun smie-bnf->prec2 bnf &rest resolvers
3503 This function lets you specify the grammar using a BNF notation.
3504 It accepts a @var{bnf} description of the grammar along with a set of
3505 conflict resolution rules @var{resolvers}, and
3506 returns a @emph{prec2} table.
3507
3508 @var{bnf} is a list of nonterminal definitions of the form
3509 @code{(@var{nonterm} @var{rhs1} @var{rhs2} ...)} where each @var{rhs}
3510 is a (non-empty) list of terminals (aka tokens) or non-terminals.
3511
3512 Not all grammars are accepted:
3513 @itemize
3514 @item
3515 An @var{rhs} cannot be an empty list (an empty list is never needed,
3516 since SMIE allows all non-terminals to match the empty string anyway).
3517 @item
3518 An @var{rhs} cannot have 2 consecutive non-terminals: each pair of
3519 non-terminals needs to be separated by a terminal (aka token).
3520 This is a fundamental limitation of operator precedence grammars.
3521 @end itemize
3522
3523 Additionally, conflicts can occur:
3524 @itemize
3525 @item
3526 The returned @emph{prec2} table holds constraints between pairs of tokens, and
3527 for any given pair only one constraint can be present: T1 < T2,
3528 T1 = T2, or T1 > T2.
3529 @item
3530 A token can be an @code{opener} (something similar to an open-paren),
3531 a @code{closer} (like a close-paren), or @code{neither} of the two
3532 (e.g. an infix operator, or an inner token like @code{"else"}).
3533 @end itemize
3534
3535 Precedence conflicts can be resolved via @var{resolvers}, which
3536 is a list of @emph{precs} tables (see @code{smie-precs->prec2}): for
3537 each precedence conflict, if those @code{precs} tables
3538 specify a particular constraint, then the conflict is resolved by using
3539 this constraint instead, else a conflict is reported and one of the
3540 conflicting constraints is picked arbitrarily and the others are
3541 simply ignored.
3542 @end defun
3543
3544 @node SMIE Grammar
3545 @subsubsection Defining the Grammar of a Language
3546
3547 The usual way to define the SMIE grammar of a language is by
3548 defining a new global variable that holds the precedence table by
3549 giving a set of BNF rules.
3550 For example, the grammar definition for a small Pascal-like language
3551 could look like:
3552 @example
3553 @group
3554 (require 'smie)
3555 (defvar sample-smie-grammar
3556 (smie-prec2->grammar
3557 (smie-bnf->prec2
3558 @end group
3559 @group
3560 '((id)
3561 (inst ("begin" insts "end")
3562 ("if" exp "then" inst "else" inst)
3563 (id ":=" exp)
3564 (exp))
3565 (insts (insts ";" insts) (inst))
3566 (exp (exp "+" exp)
3567 (exp "*" exp)
3568 ("(" exps ")"))
3569 (exps (exps "," exps) (exp)))
3570 @end group
3571 @group
3572 '((assoc ";"))
3573 '((assoc ","))
3574 '((assoc "+") (assoc "*")))))
3575 @end group
3576 @end example
3577
3578 @noindent
3579 A few things to note:
3580
3581 @itemize
3582 @item
3583 The above grammar does not explicitly mention the syntax of function
3584 calls: SMIE will automatically allow any sequence of sexps, such as
3585 identifiers, balanced parentheses, or @code{begin ... end} blocks
3586 to appear anywhere anyway.
3587 @item
3588 The grammar category @code{id} has no right hand side: this does not
3589 mean that it can match only the empty string, since as mentioned any
3590 sequence of sexps can appear anywhere anyway.
3591 @item
3592 Because non terminals cannot appear consecutively in the BNF grammar, it
3593 is difficult to correctly handle tokens that act as terminators, so the
3594 above grammar treats @code{";"} as a statement @emph{separator} instead,
3595 which SMIE can handle very well.
3596 @item
3597 Separators used in sequences (such as @code{","} and @code{";"} above)
3598 are best defined with BNF rules such as @code{(foo (foo "separator" foo) ...)}
3599 which generate precedence conflicts which are then resolved by giving
3600 them an explicit @code{(assoc "separator")}.
3601 @item
3602 The @code{("(" exps ")")} rule was not needed to pair up parens, since
3603 SMIE will pair up any characters that are marked as having paren syntax
3604 in the syntax table. What this rule does instead (together with the
3605 definition of @code{exps}) is to make it clear that @code{","} should
3606 not appear outside of parentheses.
3607 @item
3608 Rather than have a single @emph{precs} table to resolve conflicts, it is
3609 preferable to have several tables, so as to let the BNF part of the
3610 grammar specify relative precedences where possible.
3611 @item
3612 Unless there is a very good reason to prefer @code{left} or
3613 @code{right}, it is usually preferable to mark operators as associative,
3614 using @code{assoc}. For that reason @code{"+"} and @code{"*"} are
3615 defined above as @code{assoc}, although the language defines them
3616 formally as left associative.
3617 @end itemize
3618
3619 @node SMIE Lexer
3620 @subsubsection Defining Tokens
3621
3622 SMIE comes with a predefined lexical analyzer which uses syntax tables
3623 in the following way: any sequence of characters that have word or
3624 symbol syntax is considered a token, and so is any sequence of
3625 characters that have punctuation syntax. This default lexer is
3626 often a good starting point but is rarely actually correct for any given
3627 language. For example, it will consider @code{"2,+3"} to be composed
3628 of 3 tokens: @code{"2"}, @code{",+"}, and @code{"3"}.
3629
3630 To describe the lexing rules of your language to SMIE, you need
3631 2 functions, one to fetch the next token, and another to fetch the
3632 previous token. Those functions will usually first skip whitespace and
3633 comments and then look at the next chunk of text to see if it
3634 is a special token. If so it should skip the token and
3635 return a description of this token. Usually this is simply the string
3636 extracted from the buffer, but it can be anything you want.
3637 For example:
3638 @example
3639 @group
3640 (defvar sample-keywords-regexp
3641 (regexp-opt '("+" "*" "," ";" ">" ">=" "<" "<=" ":=" "=")))
3642 @end group
3643 @group
3644 (defun sample-smie-forward-token ()
3645 (forward-comment (point-max))
3646 (cond
3647 ((looking-at sample-keywords-regexp)
3648 (goto-char (match-end 0))
3649 (match-string-no-properties 0))
3650 (t (buffer-substring-no-properties
3651 (point)
3652 (progn (skip-syntax-forward "w_")
3653 (point))))))
3654 @end group
3655 @group
3656 (defun sample-smie-backward-token ()
3657 (forward-comment (- (point)))
3658 (cond
3659 ((looking-back sample-keywords-regexp (- (point) 2) t)
3660 (goto-char (match-beginning 0))
3661 (match-string-no-properties 0))
3662 (t (buffer-substring-no-properties
3663 (point)
3664 (progn (skip-syntax-backward "w_")
3665 (point))))))
3666 @end group
3667 @end example
3668
3669 Notice how those lexers return the empty string when in front of
3670 parentheses. This is because SMIE automatically takes care of the
3671 parentheses defined in the syntax table. More specifically if the lexer
3672 returns nil or an empty string, SMIE tries to handle the corresponding
3673 text as a sexp according to syntax tables.
3674
3675 @node SMIE Tricks
3676 @subsubsection Living With a Weak Parser
3677
3678 The parsing technique used by SMIE does not allow tokens to behave
3679 differently in different contexts. For most programming languages, this
3680 manifests itself by precedence conflicts when converting the
3681 BNF grammar.
3682
3683 Sometimes, those conflicts can be worked around by expressing the
3684 grammar slightly differently. For example, for Modula-2 it might seem
3685 natural to have a BNF grammar that looks like this:
3686
3687 @example
3688 ...
3689 (inst ("IF" exp "THEN" insts "ELSE" insts "END")
3690 ("CASE" exp "OF" cases "END")
3691 ...)
3692 (cases (cases "|" cases)
3693 (caselabel ":" insts)
3694 ("ELSE" insts))
3695 ...
3696 @end example
3697
3698 But this will create conflicts for @code{"ELSE"}: on the one hand, the
3699 IF rule implies (among many other things) that @code{"ELSE" = "END"};
3700 but on the other hand, since @code{"ELSE"} appears within @code{cases},
3701 which appears left of @code{"END"}, we also have @code{"ELSE" > "END"}.
3702 We can solve the conflict either by using:
3703 @example
3704 ...
3705 (inst ("IF" exp "THEN" insts "ELSE" insts "END")
3706 ("CASE" exp "OF" cases "END")
3707 ("CASE" exp "OF" cases "ELSE" insts "END")
3708 ...)
3709 (cases (cases "|" cases) (caselabel ":" insts))
3710 ...
3711 @end example
3712 or
3713 @example
3714 ...
3715 (inst ("IF" exp "THEN" else "END")
3716 ("CASE" exp "OF" cases "END")
3717 ...)
3718 (else (insts "ELSE" insts))
3719 (cases (cases "|" cases) (caselabel ":" insts) (else))
3720 ...
3721 @end example
3722
3723 Reworking the grammar to try and solve conflicts has its downsides, tho,
3724 because SMIE assumes that the grammar reflects the logical structure of
3725 the code, so it is preferable to keep the BNF closer to the intended
3726 abstract syntax tree.
3727
3728 Other times, after careful consideration you may conclude that those
3729 conflicts are not serious and simply resolve them via the
3730 @var{resolvers} argument of @code{smie-bnf->prec2}. Usually this is
3731 because the grammar is simply ambiguous: the conflict does not affect
3732 the set of programs described by the grammar, but only the way those
3733 programs are parsed. This is typically the case for separators and
3734 associative infix operators, where you want to add a resolver like
3735 @code{'((assoc "|"))}. Another case where this can happen is for the
3736 classic @emph{dangling else} problem, where you will use @code{'((assoc
3737 "else" "then"))}. It can also happen for cases where the conflict is
3738 real and cannot really be resolved, but it is unlikely to pose a problem
3739 in practice.
3740
3741 Finally, in many cases some conflicts will remain despite all efforts to
3742 restructure the grammar. Do not despair: while the parser cannot be
3743 made more clever, you can make the lexer as smart as you want. So, the
3744 solution is then to look at the tokens involved in the conflict and to
3745 split one of those tokens into 2 (or more) different tokens. E.g. if
3746 the grammar needs to distinguish between two incompatible uses of the
3747 token @code{"begin"}, make the lexer return different tokens (say
3748 @code{"begin-fun"} and @code{"begin-plain"}) depending on which kind of
3749 @code{"begin"} it finds. This pushes the work of distinguishing the
3750 different cases to the lexer, which will thus have to look at the
3751 surrounding text to find ad-hoc clues.
3752
3753 @node SMIE Indentation
3754 @subsubsection Specifying Indentation Rules
3755
3756 Based on the provided grammar, SMIE will be able to provide automatic
3757 indentation without any extra effort. But in practice, this default
3758 indentation style will probably not be good enough. You will want to
3759 tweak it in many different cases.
3760
3761 SMIE indentation is based on the idea that indentation rules should be
3762 as local as possible. To this end, it relies on the idea of
3763 @emph{virtual} indentation, which is the indentation that a particular
3764 program point would have if it were at the beginning of a line.
3765 Of course, if that program point is indeed at the beginning of a line,
3766 its virtual indentation is its current indentation. But if not, then
3767 SMIE uses the indentation algorithm to compute the virtual indentation
3768 of that point. Now in practice, the virtual indentation of a program
3769 point does not have to be identical to the indentation it would have if
3770 we inserted a newline before it. To see how this works, the SMIE rule
3771 for indentation after a @code{@{} in C does not care whether the
3772 @code{@{} is standing on a line of its own or is at the end of the
3773 preceding line. Instead, these different cases are handled in the
3774 indentation rule that decides how to indent before a @code{@{}.
3775
3776 Another important concept is the notion of @emph{parent}: The
3777 @emph{parent} of a token, is the head token of the nearest enclosing
3778 syntactic construct. For example, the parent of an @code{else} is the
3779 @code{if} to which it belongs, and the parent of an @code{if}, in turn,
3780 is the lead token of the surrounding construct. The command
3781 @code{backward-sexp} jumps from a token to its parent, but there are
3782 some caveats: for @emph{openers} (tokens which start a construct, like
3783 @code{if}), you need to start with point before the token, while for
3784 others you need to start with point after the token.
3785 @code{backward-sexp} stops with point before the parent token if that is
3786 the @emph{opener} of the token of interest, and otherwise it stops with
3787 point after the parent token.
3788
3789 SMIE indentation rules are specified using a function that takes two
3790 arguments @var{method} and @var{arg} where the meaning of @var{arg} and the
3791 expected return value depend on @var{method}.
3792
3793 @var{method} can be:
3794 @itemize
3795 @item
3796 @code{:after}, in which case @var{arg} is a token and the function
3797 should return the @var{offset} to use for indentation after @var{arg}.
3798 @item
3799 @code{:before}, in which case @var{arg} is a token and the function
3800 should return the @var{offset} to use to indent @var{arg} itself.
3801 @item
3802 @code{:elem}, in which case the function should return either the offset
3803 to use to indent function arguments (if @var{arg} is the symbol
3804 @code{arg}) or the basic indentation step (if @var{arg} is the symbol
3805 @code{basic}).
3806 @item
3807 @code{:list-intro}, in which case @var{arg} is a token and the function
3808 should return non-@code{nil} if the token is followed by a list of
3809 expressions (not separated by any token) rather than an expression.
3810 @end itemize
3811
3812 When @var{arg} is a token, the function is called with point just before
3813 that token. A return value of nil always means to fallback on the
3814 default behavior, so the function should return nil for arguments it
3815 does not expect.
3816
3817 @var{offset} can be:
3818 @itemize
3819 @item
3820 @code{nil}: use the default indentation rule.
3821 @item
3822 @code{(column . @var{column})}: indent to column @var{column}.
3823 @item
3824 @var{number}: offset by @var{number}, relative to a base token which is
3825 the current token for @code{:after} and its parent for @code{:before}.
3826 @end itemize
3827
3828 @node SMIE Indentation Helpers
3829 @subsubsection Helper Functions for Indentation Rules
3830
3831 SMIE provides various functions designed specifically for use in the
3832 indentation rules function (several of those functions break if used in
3833 another context). These functions all start with the prefix
3834 @code{smie-rule-}.
3835
3836 @defun smie-rule-bolp
3837 Return non-@code{nil} if the current token is the first on the line.
3838 @end defun
3839
3840 @defun smie-rule-hanging-p
3841 Return non-@code{nil} if the current token is @emph{hanging}.
3842 A token is @emph{hanging} if it is the last token on the line
3843 and if it is preceded by other tokens: a lone token on a line is not
3844 hanging.
3845 @end defun
3846
3847 @defun smie-rule-next-p &rest tokens
3848 Return non-@code{nil} if the next token is among @var{tokens}.
3849 @end defun
3850
3851 @defun smie-rule-prev-p &rest tokens
3852 Return non-@code{nil} if the previous token is among @var{tokens}.
3853 @end defun
3854
3855 @defun smie-rule-parent-p &rest parents
3856 Return non-@code{nil} if the current token's parent is among @var{parents}.
3857 @end defun
3858
3859 @defun smie-rule-sibling-p
3860 Return non-nil if the current token's parent is actually a sibling.
3861 This is the case for example when the parent of a @code{","} is just the
3862 previous @code{","}.
3863 @end defun
3864
3865 @defun smie-rule-parent &optional offset
3866 Return the proper offset to align the current token with the parent.
3867 If non-@code{nil}, @var{offset} should be an integer giving an
3868 additional offset to apply.
3869 @end defun
3870
3871 @defun smie-rule-separator method
3872 Indent current token as a @emph{separator}.
3873
3874 By @emph{separator}, we mean here a token whose sole purpose is to
3875 separate various elements within some enclosing syntactic construct, and
3876 which does not have any semantic significance in itself (i.e. it would
3877 typically not exist as a node in an abstract syntax tree).
3878
3879 Such a token is expected to have an associative syntax and be closely
3880 tied to its syntactic parent. Typical examples are @code{","} in lists
3881 of arguments (enclosed inside parentheses), or @code{";"} in sequences
3882 of instructions (enclosed in a @code{@{...@}} or @code{begin...end}
3883 block).
3884
3885 @var{method} should be the method name that was passed to
3886 `smie-rules-function'.
3887 @end defun
3888
3889 @node SMIE Indentation Example
3890 @subsubsection Sample Indentation Rules
3891
3892 Here is an example of an indentation function:
3893
3894 @example
3895 (defun sample-smie-rules (kind token)
3896 (pcase (cons kind token)
3897 (`(:elem . basic) sample-indent-basic)
3898 (`(,_ . ",") (smie-rule-separator kind))
3899 (`(:after . ":=") sample-indent-basic)
3900 (`(:before . ,(or `"begin" `"(" `"@{")))
3901 (if (smie-rule-hanging-p) (smie-rule-parent)))
3902 (`(:before . "if")
3903 (and (not (smie-rule-bolp)) (smie-rule-prev-p "else")
3904 (smie-rule-parent)))))
3905 @end example
3906
3907 @noindent
3908 A few things to note:
3909
3910 @itemize
3911 @item
3912 The first case indicates the basic indentation increment to use.
3913 If @code{sample-indent-basic} is nil, then SMIE uses the global
3914 setting @code{smie-indent-basic}. The major mode could have set
3915 @code{smie-indent-basic} buffer-locally instead, but that
3916 is discouraged.
3917
3918 @item
3919 The rule for the token @code{","} make SMIE try to be more clever when
3920 the comma separator is placed at the beginning of lines. It tries to
3921 outdent the separator so as to align the code after the comma; for
3922 example:
3923
3924 @example
3925 x = longfunctionname (
3926 arg1
3927 , arg2
3928 );
3929 @end example
3930
3931 @item
3932 The rule for indentation after @code{":="} exists because otherwise
3933 SMIE would treat @code{":="} as an infix operator and would align the
3934 right argument with the left one.
3935
3936 @item
3937 The rule for indentation before @code{"begin"} is an example of the use
3938 of virtual indentation: This rule is used only when @code{"begin"} is
3939 hanging, which can happen only when @code{"begin"} is not at the
3940 beginning of a line. So this is not used when indenting
3941 @code{"begin"} itself but only when indenting something relative to this
3942 @code{"begin"}. Concretely, this rule changes the indentation from:
3943
3944 @example
3945 if x > 0 then begin
3946 dosomething(x);
3947 end
3948 @end example
3949 to
3950 @example
3951 if x > 0 then begin
3952 dosomething(x);
3953 end
3954 @end example
3955
3956 @item
3957 The rule for indentation before @code{"if"} is similar to the one for
3958 @code{"begin"}, but where the purpose is to treat @code{"else if"}
3959 as a single unit, so as to align a sequence of tests rather than indent
3960 each test further to the right. This function does this only in the
3961 case where the @code{"if"} is not placed on a separate line, hence the
3962 @code{smie-rule-bolp} test.
3963
3964 If we know that the @code{"else"} is always aligned with its @code{"if"}
3965 and is always at the beginning of a line, we can use a more efficient
3966 rule:
3967 @example
3968 ((equal token "if")
3969 (and (not (smie-rule-bolp))
3970 (smie-rule-prev-p "else")
3971 (save-excursion
3972 (sample-smie-backward-token)
3973 (cons 'column (current-column)))))
3974 @end example
3975
3976 The advantage of this formulation is that it reuses the indentation of
3977 the previous @code{"else"}, rather than going all the way back to the
3978 first @code{"if"} of the sequence.
3979 @end itemize
3980
3981 @node Desktop Save Mode
3982 @section Desktop Save Mode
3983 @cindex desktop save mode
3984
3985 @dfn{Desktop Save Mode} is a feature to save the state of Emacs from
3986 one session to another. The user-level commands for using Desktop
3987 Save Mode are described in the GNU Emacs Manual (@pxref{Saving Emacs
3988 Sessions,,, emacs, the GNU Emacs Manual}). Modes whose buffers visit
3989 a file, don't have to do anything to use this feature.
3990
3991 For buffers not visiting a file to have their state saved, the major
3992 mode must bind the buffer local variable @code{desktop-save-buffer} to
3993 a non-@code{nil} value.
3994
3995 @defvar desktop-save-buffer
3996 If this buffer-local variable is non-@code{nil}, the buffer will have
3997 its state saved in the desktop file at desktop save. If the value is
3998 a function, it is called at desktop save with argument
3999 @var{desktop-dirname}, and its value is saved in the desktop file along
4000 with the state of the buffer for which it was called. When file names
4001 are returned as part of the auxiliary information, they should be
4002 formatted using the call
4003
4004 @example
4005 (desktop-file-name @var{file-name} @var{desktop-dirname})
4006 @end example
4007
4008 @end defvar
4009
4010 For buffers not visiting a file to be restored, the major mode must
4011 define a function to do the job, and that function must be listed in
4012 the alist @code{desktop-buffer-mode-handlers}.
4013
4014 @defvar desktop-buffer-mode-handlers
4015 Alist with elements
4016
4017 @example
4018 (@var{major-mode} . @var{restore-buffer-function})
4019 @end example
4020
4021 The function @var{restore-buffer-function} will be called with
4022 argument list
4023
4024 @example
4025 (@var{buffer-file-name} @var{buffer-name} @var{desktop-buffer-misc})
4026 @end example
4027
4028 and it should return the restored buffer.
4029 Here @var{desktop-buffer-misc} is the value returned by the function
4030 optionally bound to @code{desktop-save-buffer}.
4031 @end defvar
4032
4033 @ignore
4034 Local Variables:
4035 fill-column: 72
4036 End:
4037 @end ignore