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1 @c -*-texinfo-*-
2 @c This is part of the GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.
3 @c Copyright (C) 1990-1995, 1998-1999, 2001-2012
4 @c Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5 @c See the file elisp.texi for copying conditions.
6 @setfilename ../../info/syntax
7 @node Syntax Tables, Abbrevs, Searching and Matching, Top
8 @chapter Syntax Tables
9 @cindex parsing buffer text
10 @cindex syntax table
11 @cindex text parsing
12
13 A @dfn{syntax table} specifies the syntactic textual function of each
14 character. This information is used by the @dfn{parsing functions}, the
15 complex movement commands, and others to determine where words, symbols,
16 and other syntactic constructs begin and end. The current syntax table
17 controls the meaning of the word motion functions (@pxref{Word Motion})
18 and the list motion functions (@pxref{List Motion}), as well as the
19 functions in this chapter.
20
21 @menu
22 * Basics: Syntax Basics. Basic concepts of syntax tables.
23 * Desc: Syntax Descriptors. How characters are classified.
24 * Syntax Table Functions:: How to create, examine and alter syntax tables.
25 * Syntax Properties:: Overriding syntax with text properties.
26 * Motion and Syntax:: Moving over characters with certain syntaxes.
27 * Parsing Expressions:: Parsing balanced expressions
28 using the syntax table.
29 * Standard Syntax Tables:: Syntax tables used by various major modes.
30 * Syntax Table Internals:: How syntax table information is stored.
31 * Categories:: Another way of classifying character syntax.
32 @end menu
33
34 @node Syntax Basics
35 @section Syntax Table Concepts
36
37 @ifnottex
38 A @dfn{syntax table} provides Emacs with the information that
39 determines the syntactic use of each character in a buffer. This
40 information is used by the parsing commands, the complex movement
41 commands, and others to determine where words, symbols, and other
42 syntactic constructs begin and end. The current syntax table controls
43 the meaning of the word motion functions (@pxref{Word Motion}) and the
44 list motion functions (@pxref{List Motion}) as well as the functions in
45 this chapter.
46 @end ifnottex
47
48 A syntax table is a char-table (@pxref{Char-Tables}). The element at
49 index @var{c} describes the character with code @var{c}. The element's
50 value should be a list that encodes the syntax of the character in
51 question.
52
53 Syntax tables are used only for moving across text, not for the Emacs
54 Lisp reader. Emacs Lisp uses built-in syntactic rules when reading Lisp
55 expressions, and these rules cannot be changed. (Some Lisp systems
56 provide ways to redefine the read syntax, but we decided to leave this
57 feature out of Emacs Lisp for simplicity.)
58
59 Each buffer has its own major mode, and each major mode has its own
60 idea of the syntactic class of various characters. For example, in Lisp
61 mode, the character @samp{;} begins a comment, but in C mode, it
62 terminates a statement. To support these variations, Emacs makes the
63 choice of syntax table local to each buffer. Typically, each major
64 mode has its own syntax table and installs that table in each buffer
65 that uses that mode. Changing this table alters the syntax in all
66 those buffers as well as in any buffers subsequently put in that mode.
67 Occasionally several similar modes share one syntax table.
68 @xref{Example Major Modes}, for an example of how to set up a syntax
69 table.
70
71 A syntax table can inherit the data for some characters from the
72 standard syntax table, while specifying other characters itself. The
73 ``inherit'' syntax class means ``inherit this character's syntax from
74 the standard syntax table.'' Just changing the standard syntax for a
75 character affects all syntax tables that inherit from it.
76
77 @defun syntax-table-p object
78 This function returns @code{t} if @var{object} is a syntax table.
79 @end defun
80
81 @node Syntax Descriptors
82 @section Syntax Descriptors
83 @cindex syntax class
84
85 This section describes the syntax classes and flags that denote the
86 syntax of a character, and how they are represented as a @dfn{syntax
87 descriptor}, which is a Lisp string that you pass to
88 @code{modify-syntax-entry} to specify the syntax you want.
89
90 The syntax table specifies a syntax class for each character. There
91 is no necessary relationship between the class of a character in one
92 syntax table and its class in any other table.
93
94 Each class is designated by a mnemonic character, which serves as the
95 name of the class when you need to specify a class. Usually the
96 designator character is one that is often assigned that class; however,
97 its meaning as a designator is unvarying and independent of what syntax
98 that character currently has. Thus, @samp{\} as a designator character
99 always gives ``escape character'' syntax, regardless of what syntax
100 @samp{\} currently has.
101
102 @cindex syntax descriptor
103 A syntax descriptor is a Lisp string that specifies a syntax class, a
104 matching character (used only for the parenthesis classes) and flags.
105 The first character is the designator for a syntax class. The second
106 character is the character to match; if it is unused, put a space there.
107 Then come the characters for any desired flags. If no matching
108 character or flags are needed, one character is sufficient.
109
110 For example, the syntax descriptor for the character @samp{*} in C
111 mode is @code{". 23"} (i.e., punctuation, matching character slot
112 unused, second character of a comment-starter, first character of a
113 comment-ender), and the entry for @samp{/} is @samp{@w{. 14}} (i.e.,
114 punctuation, matching character slot unused, first character of a
115 comment-starter, second character of a comment-ender).
116
117 @menu
118 * Syntax Class Table:: Table of syntax classes.
119 * Syntax Flags:: Additional flags each character can have.
120 @end menu
121
122 @node Syntax Class Table
123 @subsection Table of Syntax Classes
124
125 Here is a table of syntax classes, the characters that stand for them,
126 their meanings, and examples of their use.
127
128 @deffn {Syntax class} @w{whitespace character}
129 @dfn{Whitespace characters} (designated by @w{@samp{@ }} or @samp{-})
130 separate symbols and words from each other. Typically, whitespace
131 characters have no other syntactic significance, and multiple whitespace
132 characters are syntactically equivalent to a single one. Space, tab,
133 newline and formfeed are classified as whitespace in almost all major
134 modes.
135 @end deffn
136
137 @deffn {Syntax class} @w{word constituent}
138 @dfn{Word constituents} (designated by @samp{w}) are parts of words in
139 human languages, and are typically used in variable and command names
140 in programs. All upper- and lower-case letters, and the digits, are
141 typically word constituents.
142 @end deffn
143
144 @deffn {Syntax class} @w{symbol constituent}
145 @dfn{Symbol constituents} (designated by @samp{_}) are the extra
146 characters that are used in variable and command names along with word
147 constituents. For example, the symbol constituents class is used in
148 Lisp mode to indicate that certain characters may be part of symbol
149 names even though they are not part of English words. These characters
150 are @samp{$&*+-_<>}. In standard C, the only non-word-constituent
151 character that is valid in symbols is underscore (@samp{_}).
152 @end deffn
153
154 @deffn {Syntax class} @w{punctuation character}
155 @dfn{Punctuation characters} (designated by @samp{.}) are those
156 characters that are used as punctuation in English, or are used in some
157 way in a programming language to separate symbols from one another.
158 Some programming language modes, such as Emacs Lisp mode, have no
159 characters in this class since the few characters that are not symbol or
160 word constituents all have other uses. Other programming language modes,
161 such as C mode, use punctuation syntax for operators.
162 @end deffn
163
164 @deffn {Syntax class} @w{open parenthesis character}
165 @deffnx {Syntax class} @w{close parenthesis character}
166 @cindex parenthesis syntax
167 Open and close @dfn{parenthesis characters} are characters used in
168 dissimilar pairs to surround sentences or expressions. Such a grouping
169 is begun with an open parenthesis character and terminated with a close.
170 Each open parenthesis character matches a particular close parenthesis
171 character, and vice versa. Normally, Emacs indicates momentarily the
172 matching open parenthesis when you insert a close parenthesis.
173 @xref{Blinking}.
174
175 The class of open parentheses is designated by @samp{(}, and that of
176 close parentheses by @samp{)}.
177
178 In English text, and in C code, the parenthesis pairs are @samp{()},
179 @samp{[]}, and @samp{@{@}}. In Emacs Lisp, the delimiters for lists and
180 vectors (@samp{()} and @samp{[]}) are classified as parenthesis
181 characters.
182 @end deffn
183
184 @deffn {Syntax class} @w{string quote}
185 @dfn{String quote characters} (designated by @samp{"}) are used in
186 many languages, including Lisp and C, to delimit string constants. The
187 same string quote character appears at the beginning and the end of a
188 string. Such quoted strings do not nest.
189
190 The parsing facilities of Emacs consider a string as a single token.
191 The usual syntactic meanings of the characters in the string are
192 suppressed.
193
194 The Lisp modes have two string quote characters: double-quote (@samp{"})
195 and vertical bar (@samp{|}). @samp{|} is not used in Emacs Lisp, but it
196 is used in Common Lisp. C also has two string quote characters:
197 double-quote for strings, and single-quote (@samp{'}) for character
198 constants.
199
200 English text has no string quote characters because English is not a
201 programming language. Although quotation marks are used in English,
202 we do not want them to turn off the usual syntactic properties of
203 other characters in the quotation.
204 @end deffn
205
206 @deffn {Syntax class} @w{escape-syntax character}
207 An @dfn{escape character} (designated by @samp{\}) starts an escape
208 sequence such as is used in C string and character constants. The
209 character @samp{\} belongs to this class in both C and Lisp. (In C, it
210 is used thus only inside strings, but it turns out to cause no trouble
211 to treat it this way throughout C code.)
212
213 Characters in this class count as part of words if
214 @code{words-include-escapes} is non-@code{nil}. @xref{Word Motion}.
215 @end deffn
216
217 @deffn {Syntax class} @w{character quote}
218 A @dfn{character quote character} (designated by @samp{/}) quotes the
219 following character so that it loses its normal syntactic meaning. This
220 differs from an escape character in that only the character immediately
221 following is ever affected.
222
223 Characters in this class count as part of words if
224 @code{words-include-escapes} is non-@code{nil}. @xref{Word Motion}.
225
226 This class is used for backslash in @TeX{} mode.
227 @end deffn
228
229 @deffn {Syntax class} @w{paired delimiter}
230 @dfn{Paired delimiter characters} (designated by @samp{$}) are like
231 string quote characters except that the syntactic properties of the
232 characters between the delimiters are not suppressed. Only @TeX{} mode
233 uses a paired delimiter presently---the @samp{$} that both enters and
234 leaves math mode.
235 @end deffn
236
237 @deffn {Syntax class} @w{expression prefix}
238 An @dfn{expression prefix operator} (designated by @samp{'}) is used for
239 syntactic operators that are considered as part of an expression if they
240 appear next to one. In Lisp modes, these characters include the
241 apostrophe, @samp{'} (used for quoting), the comma, @samp{,} (used in
242 macros), and @samp{#} (used in the read syntax for certain data types).
243 @end deffn
244
245 @deffn {Syntax class} @w{comment starter}
246 @deffnx {Syntax class} @w{comment ender}
247 @cindex comment syntax
248 The @dfn{comment starter} and @dfn{comment ender} characters are used in
249 various languages to delimit comments. These classes are designated
250 by @samp{<} and @samp{>}, respectively.
251
252 English text has no comment characters. In Lisp, the semicolon
253 (@samp{;}) starts a comment and a newline or formfeed ends one.
254 @end deffn
255
256 @deffn {Syntax class} @w{inherit standard syntax}
257 This syntax class does not specify a particular syntax. It says to look
258 in the standard syntax table to find the syntax of this character. The
259 designator for this syntax class is @samp{@@}.
260 @end deffn
261
262 @deffn {Syntax class} @w{generic comment delimiter}
263 A @dfn{generic comment delimiter} (designated by @samp{!}) starts
264 or ends a special kind of comment. @emph{Any} generic comment delimiter
265 matches @emph{any} generic comment delimiter, but they cannot match
266 a comment starter or comment ender; generic comment delimiters can only
267 match each other.
268
269 This syntax class is primarily meant for use with the
270 @code{syntax-table} text property (@pxref{Syntax Properties}). You can
271 mark any range of characters as forming a comment, by giving the first
272 and last characters of the range @code{syntax-table} properties
273 identifying them as generic comment delimiters.
274 @end deffn
275
276 @deffn {Syntax class} @w{generic string delimiter}
277 A @dfn{generic string delimiter} (designated by @samp{|}) starts or ends
278 a string. This class differs from the string quote class in that @emph{any}
279 generic string delimiter can match any other generic string delimiter; but
280 they do not match ordinary string quote characters.
281
282 This syntax class is primarily meant for use with the
283 @code{syntax-table} text property (@pxref{Syntax Properties}). You can
284 mark any range of characters as forming a string constant, by giving the
285 first and last characters of the range @code{syntax-table} properties
286 identifying them as generic string delimiters.
287 @end deffn
288
289 @node Syntax Flags
290 @subsection Syntax Flags
291 @cindex syntax flags
292
293 In addition to the classes, entries for characters in a syntax table
294 can specify flags. There are eight possible flags, represented by the
295 characters @samp{1}, @samp{2}, @samp{3}, @samp{4}, @samp{b}, @samp{c},
296 @samp{n}, and @samp{p}.
297
298 All the flags except @samp{p} are used to describe comment
299 delimiters. The digit flags are used for comment delimiters made up
300 of 2 characters. They indicate that a character can @emph{also} be
301 part of a comment sequence, in addition to the syntactic properties
302 associated with its character class. The flags are independent of the
303 class and each other for the sake of characters such as @samp{*} in
304 C mode, which is a punctuation character, @emph{and} the second
305 character of a start-of-comment sequence (@samp{/*}), @emph{and} the
306 first character of an end-of-comment sequence (@samp{*/}). The flags
307 @samp{b}, @samp{c}, and @samp{n} are used to qualify the corresponding
308 comment delimiter.
309
310 Here is a table of the possible flags for a character @var{c},
311 and what they mean:
312
313 @itemize @bullet
314 @item
315 @samp{1} means @var{c} is the start of a two-character comment-start
316 sequence.
317
318 @item
319 @samp{2} means @var{c} is the second character of such a sequence.
320
321 @item
322 @samp{3} means @var{c} is the start of a two-character comment-end
323 sequence.
324
325 @item
326 @samp{4} means @var{c} is the second character of such a sequence.
327
328 @item
329 @samp{b} means that @var{c} as a comment delimiter belongs to the
330 alternative ``b'' comment style. For a two-character comment starter,
331 this flag is only significant on the second char, and for a 2-character
332 comment ender it is only significant on the first char.
333
334 @item
335 @samp{c} means that @var{c} as a comment delimiter belongs to the
336 alternative ``c'' comment style. For a two-character comment
337 delimiter, @samp{c} on either character makes it of style ``c''.
338
339 @item
340 @samp{n} on a comment delimiter character specifies
341 that this kind of comment can be nested. For a two-character
342 comment delimiter, @samp{n} on either character makes it
343 nestable.
344
345 Emacs supports several comment styles simultaneously in any one syntax
346 table. A comment style is a set of flags @samp{b}, @samp{c}, and
347 @samp{n}, so there can be up to 8 different comment styles.
348 Each comment delimiter has a style and only matches comment delimiters
349 of the same style. Thus if a comment starts with the comment-start
350 sequence of style ``bn'', it will extend until the next matching
351 comment-end sequence of style ``bn''.
352
353 The appropriate comment syntax settings for C++ can be as follows:
354
355 @table @asis
356 @item @samp{/}
357 @samp{124}
358 @item @samp{*}
359 @samp{23b}
360 @item newline
361 @samp{>}
362 @end table
363
364 This defines four comment-delimiting sequences:
365
366 @table @asis
367 @item @samp{/*}
368 This is a comment-start sequence for ``b'' style because the
369 second character, @samp{*}, has the @samp{b} flag.
370
371 @item @samp{//}
372 This is a comment-start sequence for ``a'' style because the second
373 character, @samp{/}, does not have the @samp{b} flag.
374
375 @item @samp{*/}
376 This is a comment-end sequence for ``b'' style because the first
377 character, @samp{*}, has the @samp{b} flag.
378
379 @item newline
380 This is a comment-end sequence for ``a'' style, because the newline
381 character does not have the @samp{b} flag.
382 @end table
383
384 @item
385 @c Emacs 19 feature
386 @samp{p} identifies an additional ``prefix character'' for Lisp syntax.
387 These characters are treated as whitespace when they appear between
388 expressions. When they appear within an expression, they are handled
389 according to their usual syntax classes.
390
391 The function @code{backward-prefix-chars} moves back over these
392 characters, as well as over characters whose primary syntax class is
393 prefix (@samp{'}). @xref{Motion and Syntax}.
394 @end itemize
395
396 @node Syntax Table Functions
397 @section Syntax Table Functions
398
399 In this section we describe functions for creating, accessing and
400 altering syntax tables.
401
402 @defun make-syntax-table &optional table
403 This function creates a new syntax table, with all values initialized
404 to @code{nil}. If @var{table} is non-@code{nil}, it becomes the
405 parent of the new syntax table, otherwise the standard syntax table is
406 the parent. Like all char-tables, a syntax table inherits from its
407 parent. Thus the original syntax of all characters in the returned
408 syntax table is determined by the parent. @xref{Char-Tables}.
409
410 Most major mode syntax tables are created in this way.
411 @end defun
412
413 @defun copy-syntax-table &optional table
414 This function constructs a copy of @var{table} and returns it. If
415 @var{table} is not supplied (or is @code{nil}), it returns a copy of the
416 standard syntax table. Otherwise, an error is signaled if @var{table} is
417 not a syntax table.
418 @end defun
419
420 @deffn Command modify-syntax-entry char syntax-descriptor &optional table
421 This function sets the syntax entry for @var{char} according to
422 @var{syntax-descriptor}. @var{char} can be a character, or a cons
423 cell of the form @code{(@var{min} . @var{max})}; in the latter case,
424 the function sets the syntax entries for all characters in the range
425 between @var{min} and @var{max}, inclusive.
426
427 The syntax is changed only for @var{table}, which defaults to the
428 current buffer's syntax table, and not in any other syntax table. The
429 argument @var{syntax-descriptor} specifies the desired syntax; this is
430 a string beginning with a class designator character, and optionally
431 containing a matching character and flags as well. @xref{Syntax
432 Descriptors}.
433
434 This function always returns @code{nil}. The old syntax information in
435 the table for this character is discarded.
436
437 An error is signaled if the first character of the syntax descriptor is not
438 one of the seventeen syntax class designator characters. An error is also
439 signaled if @var{char} is not a character.
440
441 @example
442 @group
443 @exdent @r{Examples:}
444
445 ;; @r{Put the space character in class whitespace.}
446 (modify-syntax-entry ?\s " ")
447 @result{} nil
448 @end group
449
450 @group
451 ;; @r{Make @samp{$} an open parenthesis character,}
452 ;; @r{with @samp{^} as its matching close.}
453 (modify-syntax-entry ?$ "(^")
454 @result{} nil
455 @end group
456
457 @group
458 ;; @r{Make @samp{^} a close parenthesis character,}
459 ;; @r{with @samp{$} as its matching open.}
460 (modify-syntax-entry ?^ ")$")
461 @result{} nil
462 @end group
463
464 @group
465 ;; @r{Make @samp{/} a punctuation character,}
466 ;; @r{the first character of a start-comment sequence,}
467 ;; @r{and the second character of an end-comment sequence.}
468 ;; @r{This is used in C mode.}
469 (modify-syntax-entry ?/ ". 14")
470 @result{} nil
471 @end group
472 @end example
473 @end deffn
474
475 @defun char-syntax character
476 This function returns the syntax class of @var{character}, represented
477 by its mnemonic designator character. This returns @emph{only} the
478 class, not any matching parenthesis or flags.
479
480 An error is signaled if @var{char} is not a character.
481
482 The following examples apply to C mode. The first example shows that
483 the syntax class of space is whitespace (represented by a space). The
484 second example shows that the syntax of @samp{/} is punctuation. This
485 does not show the fact that it is also part of comment-start and -end
486 sequences. The third example shows that open parenthesis is in the class
487 of open parentheses. This does not show the fact that it has a matching
488 character, @samp{)}.
489
490 @example
491 @group
492 (string (char-syntax ?\s))
493 @result{} " "
494 @end group
495
496 @group
497 (string (char-syntax ?/))
498 @result{} "."
499 @end group
500
501 @group
502 (string (char-syntax ?\())
503 @result{} "("
504 @end group
505 @end example
506
507 We use @code{string} to make it easier to see the character returned by
508 @code{char-syntax}.
509 @end defun
510
511 @defun set-syntax-table table
512 This function makes @var{table} the syntax table for the current buffer.
513 It returns @var{table}.
514 @end defun
515
516 @defun syntax-table
517 This function returns the current syntax table, which is the table for
518 the current buffer.
519 @end defun
520
521 @defmac with-syntax-table @var{table} @var{body}@dots{}
522 This macro executes @var{body} using @var{table} as the current syntax
523 table. It returns the value of the last form in @var{body}, after
524 restoring the old current syntax table.
525
526 Since each buffer has its own current syntax table, we should make that
527 more precise: @code{with-syntax-table} temporarily alters the current
528 syntax table of whichever buffer is current at the time the macro
529 execution starts. Other buffers are not affected.
530 @end defmac
531
532 @node Syntax Properties
533 @section Syntax Properties
534 @kindex syntax-table @r{(text property)}
535
536 When the syntax table is not flexible enough to specify the syntax of
537 a language, you can use @code{syntax-table} text properties to
538 override the syntax table for specific character occurrences in the
539 buffer. @xref{Text Properties}. You can use Font Lock mode to set
540 @code{syntax-table} text properties. @xref{Setting Syntax
541 Properties}.
542
543 The valid values of @code{syntax-table} text property are:
544
545 @table @asis
546 @item @var{syntax-table}
547 If the property value is a syntax table, that table is used instead of
548 the current buffer's syntax table to determine the syntax for this
549 occurrence of the character.
550
551 @item @code{(@var{syntax-code} . @var{matching-char})}
552 A cons cell of this format specifies the syntax for this
553 occurrence of the character. (@pxref{Syntax Table Internals})
554
555 @item @code{nil}
556 If the property is @code{nil}, the character's syntax is determined from
557 the current syntax table in the usual way.
558 @end table
559
560 @defvar parse-sexp-lookup-properties
561 If this is non-@code{nil}, the syntax scanning functions pay attention
562 to syntax text properties. Otherwise they use only the current syntax
563 table.
564 @end defvar
565
566 @node Motion and Syntax
567 @section Motion and Syntax
568
569 This section describes functions for moving across characters that
570 have certain syntax classes.
571
572 @defun skip-syntax-forward syntaxes &optional limit
573 This function moves point forward across characters having syntax
574 classes mentioned in @var{syntaxes} (a string of syntax class
575 characters). It stops when it encounters the end of the buffer, or
576 position @var{limit} (if specified), or a character it is not supposed
577 to skip.
578
579 If @var{syntaxes} starts with @samp{^}, then the function skips
580 characters whose syntax is @emph{not} in @var{syntaxes}.
581
582 The return value is the distance traveled, which is a nonnegative
583 integer.
584 @end defun
585
586 @defun skip-syntax-backward syntaxes &optional limit
587 This function moves point backward across characters whose syntax
588 classes are mentioned in @var{syntaxes}. It stops when it encounters
589 the beginning of the buffer, or position @var{limit} (if specified), or
590 a character it is not supposed to skip.
591
592 If @var{syntaxes} starts with @samp{^}, then the function skips
593 characters whose syntax is @emph{not} in @var{syntaxes}.
594
595 The return value indicates the distance traveled. It is an integer that
596 is zero or less.
597 @end defun
598
599 @defun backward-prefix-chars
600 This function moves point backward over any number of characters with
601 expression prefix syntax. This includes both characters in the
602 expression prefix syntax class, and characters with the @samp{p} flag.
603 @end defun
604
605 @node Parsing Expressions
606 @section Parsing Expressions
607
608 This section describes functions for parsing and scanning balanced
609 expressions, also known as @dfn{sexps}. Basically, a sexp is either a
610 balanced parenthetical grouping, a string, or a symbol name (a
611 sequence of characters whose syntax is either word constituent or
612 symbol constituent). However, characters whose syntax is expression
613 prefix are treated as part of the sexp if they appear next to it.
614
615 The syntax table controls the interpretation of characters, so these
616 functions can be used for Lisp expressions when in Lisp mode and for C
617 expressions when in C mode. @xref{List Motion}, for convenient
618 higher-level functions for moving over balanced expressions.
619
620 A character's syntax controls how it changes the state of the
621 parser, rather than describing the state itself. For example, a
622 string delimiter character toggles the parser state between
623 ``in-string'' and ``in-code,'' but the syntax of characters does not
624 directly say whether they are inside a string. For example (note that
625 15 is the syntax code for generic string delimiters),
626
627 @example
628 (put-text-property 1 9 'syntax-table '(15 . nil))
629 @end example
630
631 @noindent
632 does not tell Emacs that the first eight chars of the current buffer
633 are a string, but rather that they are all string delimiters. As a
634 result, Emacs treats them as four consecutive empty string constants.
635
636 @menu
637 * Motion via Parsing:: Motion functions that work by parsing.
638 * Position Parse:: Determining the syntactic state of a position.
639 * Parser State:: How Emacs represents a syntactic state.
640 * Low-Level Parsing:: Parsing across a specified region.
641 * Control Parsing:: Parameters that affect parsing.
642 @end menu
643
644 @node Motion via Parsing
645 @subsection Motion Commands Based on Parsing
646
647 This section describes simple point-motion functions that operate
648 based on parsing expressions.
649
650 @defun scan-lists from count depth
651 This function scans forward @var{count} balanced parenthetical groupings
652 from position @var{from}. It returns the position where the scan stops.
653 If @var{count} is negative, the scan moves backwards.
654
655 If @var{depth} is nonzero, parenthesis depth counting begins from that
656 value. The only candidates for stopping are places where the depth in
657 parentheses becomes zero; @code{scan-lists} counts @var{count} such
658 places and then stops. Thus, a positive value for @var{depth} means go
659 out @var{depth} levels of parenthesis.
660
661 Scanning ignores comments if @code{parse-sexp-ignore-comments} is
662 non-@code{nil}.
663
664 If the scan reaches the beginning or end of the buffer (or its
665 accessible portion), and the depth is not zero, an error is signaled.
666 If the depth is zero but the count is not used up, @code{nil} is
667 returned.
668 @end defun
669
670 @defun scan-sexps from count
671 This function scans forward @var{count} sexps from position @var{from}.
672 It returns the position where the scan stops. If @var{count} is
673 negative, the scan moves backwards.
674
675 Scanning ignores comments if @code{parse-sexp-ignore-comments} is
676 non-@code{nil}.
677
678 If the scan reaches the beginning or end of (the accessible part of) the
679 buffer while in the middle of a parenthetical grouping, an error is
680 signaled. If it reaches the beginning or end between groupings but
681 before count is used up, @code{nil} is returned.
682 @end defun
683
684 @defun forward-comment count
685 This function moves point forward across @var{count} complete comments
686 (that is, including the starting delimiter and the terminating
687 delimiter if any), plus any whitespace encountered on the way. It
688 moves backward if @var{count} is negative. If it encounters anything
689 other than a comment or whitespace, it stops, leaving point at the
690 place where it stopped. This includes (for instance) finding the end
691 of a comment when moving forward and expecting the beginning of one.
692 The function also stops immediately after moving over the specified
693 number of complete comments. If @var{count} comments are found as
694 expected, with nothing except whitespace between them, it returns
695 @code{t}; otherwise it returns @code{nil}.
696
697 This function cannot tell whether the ``comments'' it traverses are
698 embedded within a string. If they look like comments, it treats them
699 as comments.
700 @end defun
701
702 To move forward over all comments and whitespace following point, use
703 @code{(forward-comment (buffer-size))}. @code{(buffer-size)} is a good
704 argument to use, because the number of comments in the buffer cannot
705 exceed that many.
706
707 @node Position Parse
708 @subsection Finding the Parse State for a Position
709
710 For syntactic analysis, such as in indentation, often the useful
711 thing is to compute the syntactic state corresponding to a given buffer
712 position. This function does that conveniently.
713
714 @defun syntax-ppss &optional pos
715 This function returns the parser state (see next section) that the
716 parser would reach at position @var{pos} starting from the beginning
717 of the buffer. This is equivalent to @code{(parse-partial-sexp
718 (point-min) @var{pos})}, except that @code{syntax-ppss} uses a cache
719 to speed up the computation. Due to this optimization, the 2nd value
720 (previous complete subexpression) and 6th value (minimum parenthesis
721 depth) of the returned parser state are not meaningful.
722 @end defun
723
724 @code{syntax-ppss} automatically hooks itself to
725 @code{before-change-functions} to keep its cache consistent. But
726 updating can fail if @code{syntax-ppss} is called while
727 @code{before-change-functions} is temporarily let-bound, or if the
728 buffer is modified without obeying the hook, such as when using
729 @code{inhibit-modification-hooks}. For this reason, it is sometimes
730 necessary to flush the cache manually.
731
732 @defun syntax-ppss-flush-cache beg &rest ignored-args
733 This function flushes the cache used by @code{syntax-ppss}, starting
734 at position @var{beg}. The remaining arguments, @var{ignored-args},
735 are ignored; this function accepts them so that it can be directly
736 used on hooks such as @code{before-change-functions} (@pxref{Change
737 Hooks}).
738 @end defun
739
740 Major modes can make @code{syntax-ppss} run faster by specifying
741 where it needs to start parsing.
742
743 @defvar syntax-begin-function
744 If this is non-@code{nil}, it should be a function that moves to an
745 earlier buffer position where the parser state is equivalent to
746 @code{nil}---in other words, a position outside of any comment,
747 string, or parenthesis. @code{syntax-ppss} uses it to further
748 optimize its computations, when the cache gives no help.
749 @end defvar
750
751 @node Parser State
752 @subsection Parser State
753 @cindex parser state
754
755 A @dfn{parser state} is a list of ten elements describing the final
756 state of parsing text syntactically as part of an expression. The
757 parsing functions in the following sections return a parser state as
758 the value, and in some cases accept one as an argument also, so that
759 you can resume parsing after it stops. Here are the meanings of the
760 elements of the parser state:
761
762 @enumerate 0
763 @item
764 The depth in parentheses, counting from 0. @strong{Warning:} this can
765 be negative if there are more close parens than open parens between
766 the start of the defun and point.
767
768 @item
769 @cindex innermost containing parentheses
770 The character position of the start of the innermost parenthetical
771 grouping containing the stopping point; @code{nil} if none.
772
773 @item
774 @cindex previous complete subexpression
775 The character position of the start of the last complete subexpression
776 terminated; @code{nil} if none.
777
778 @item
779 @cindex inside string
780 Non-@code{nil} if inside a string. More precisely, this is the
781 character that will terminate the string, or @code{t} if a generic
782 string delimiter character should terminate it.
783
784 @item
785 @cindex inside comment
786 @code{t} if inside a comment (of either style),
787 or the comment nesting level if inside a kind of comment
788 that can be nested.
789
790 @item
791 @cindex quote character
792 @code{t} if point is just after a quote character.
793
794 @item
795 The minimum parenthesis depth encountered during this scan.
796
797 @item
798 What kind of comment is active: @code{nil} for a comment of style
799 ``a'' or when not inside a comment, @code{t} for a comment of style
800 ``b,'' and @code{syntax-table} for a comment that should be ended by a
801 generic comment delimiter character.
802
803 @item
804 The string or comment start position. While inside a comment, this is
805 the position where the comment began; while inside a string, this is the
806 position where the string began. When outside of strings and comments,
807 this element is @code{nil}.
808
809 @item
810 Internal data for continuing the parsing. The meaning of this
811 data is subject to change; it is used if you pass this list
812 as the @var{state} argument to another call.
813 @end enumerate
814
815 Elements 1, 2, and 6 are ignored in a state which you pass as an
816 argument to continue parsing, and elements 8 and 9 are used only in
817 trivial cases. Those elements serve primarily to convey information
818 to the Lisp program which does the parsing.
819
820 One additional piece of useful information is available from a
821 parser state using this function:
822
823 @defun syntax-ppss-toplevel-pos state
824 This function extracts, from parser state @var{state}, the last
825 position scanned in the parse which was at top level in grammatical
826 structure. ``At top level'' means outside of any parentheses,
827 comments, or strings.
828
829 The value is @code{nil} if @var{state} represents a parse which has
830 arrived at a top level position.
831 @end defun
832
833 We have provided this access function rather than document how the
834 data is represented in the state, because we plan to change the
835 representation in the future.
836
837 @node Low-Level Parsing
838 @subsection Low-Level Parsing
839
840 The most basic way to use the expression parser is to tell it
841 to start at a given position with a certain state, and parse up to
842 a specified end position.
843
844 @defun parse-partial-sexp start limit &optional target-depth stop-before state stop-comment
845 This function parses a sexp in the current buffer starting at
846 @var{start}, not scanning past @var{limit}. It stops at position
847 @var{limit} or when certain criteria described below are met, and sets
848 point to the location where parsing stops. It returns a parser state
849 describing the status of the parse at the point where it stops.
850
851 @cindex parenthesis depth
852 If the third argument @var{target-depth} is non-@code{nil}, parsing
853 stops if the depth in parentheses becomes equal to @var{target-depth}.
854 The depth starts at 0, or at whatever is given in @var{state}.
855
856 If the fourth argument @var{stop-before} is non-@code{nil}, parsing
857 stops when it comes to any character that starts a sexp. If
858 @var{stop-comment} is non-@code{nil}, parsing stops when it comes to the
859 start of a comment. If @var{stop-comment} is the symbol
860 @code{syntax-table}, parsing stops after the start of a comment or a
861 string, or the end of a comment or a string, whichever comes first.
862
863 If @var{state} is @code{nil}, @var{start} is assumed to be at the top
864 level of parenthesis structure, such as the beginning of a function
865 definition. Alternatively, you might wish to resume parsing in the
866 middle of the structure. To do this, you must provide a @var{state}
867 argument that describes the initial status of parsing. The value
868 returned by a previous call to @code{parse-partial-sexp} will do
869 nicely.
870 @end defun
871
872 @node Control Parsing
873 @subsection Parameters to Control Parsing
874
875 @defvar multibyte-syntax-as-symbol
876 If this variable is non-@code{nil}, @code{scan-sexps} treats all
877 non-@acronym{ASCII} characters as symbol constituents regardless
878 of what the syntax table says about them. (However, text properties
879 can still override the syntax.)
880 @end defvar
881
882 @defopt parse-sexp-ignore-comments
883 @cindex skipping comments
884 If the value is non-@code{nil}, then comments are treated as
885 whitespace by the functions in this section and by @code{forward-sexp},
886 @code{scan-lists} and @code{scan-sexps}.
887 @end defopt
888
889 @vindex parse-sexp-lookup-properties
890 The behavior of @code{parse-partial-sexp} is also affected by
891 @code{parse-sexp-lookup-properties} (@pxref{Syntax Properties}).
892
893 You can use @code{forward-comment} to move forward or backward over
894 one comment or several comments.
895
896 @node Standard Syntax Tables
897 @section Some Standard Syntax Tables
898
899 Most of the major modes in Emacs have their own syntax tables. Here
900 are several of them:
901
902 @defun standard-syntax-table
903 This function returns the standard syntax table, which is the syntax
904 table used in Fundamental mode.
905 @end defun
906
907 @defvar text-mode-syntax-table
908 The value of this variable is the syntax table used in Text mode.
909 @end defvar
910
911 @defvar c-mode-syntax-table
912 The value of this variable is the syntax table for C-mode buffers.
913 @end defvar
914
915 @defvar emacs-lisp-mode-syntax-table
916 The value of this variable is the syntax table used in Emacs Lisp mode
917 by editing commands. (It has no effect on the Lisp @code{read}
918 function.)
919 @end defvar
920
921 @node Syntax Table Internals
922 @section Syntax Table Internals
923 @cindex syntax table internals
924
925 Lisp programs don't usually work with the elements directly; the
926 Lisp-level syntax table functions usually work with syntax descriptors
927 (@pxref{Syntax Descriptors}). Nonetheless, here we document the
928 internal format. This format is used mostly when manipulating
929 syntax properties.
930
931 Each element of a syntax table is a cons cell of the form
932 @code{(@var{syntax-code} . @var{matching-char})}. The @sc{car},
933 @var{syntax-code}, is an integer that encodes the syntax class, and any
934 flags. The @sc{cdr}, @var{matching-char}, is non-@code{nil} if
935 a character to match was specified.
936
937 This table gives the value of @var{syntax-code} which corresponds
938 to each syntactic type.
939
940 @multitable @columnfractions .05 .3 .3 .31
941 @item
942 @tab
943 @i{Integer} @i{Class}
944 @tab
945 @i{Integer} @i{Class}
946 @tab
947 @i{Integer} @i{Class}
948 @item
949 @tab
950 0 @ @ whitespace
951 @tab
952 5 @ @ close parenthesis
953 @tab
954 10 @ @ character quote
955 @item
956 @tab
957 1 @ @ punctuation
958 @tab
959 6 @ @ expression prefix
960 @tab
961 11 @ @ comment-start
962 @item
963 @tab
964 2 @ @ word
965 @tab
966 7 @ @ string quote
967 @tab
968 12 @ @ comment-end
969 @item
970 @tab
971 3 @ @ symbol
972 @tab
973 8 @ @ paired delimiter
974 @tab
975 13 @ @ inherit
976 @item
977 @tab
978 4 @ @ open parenthesis
979 @tab
980 9 @ @ escape
981 @tab
982 14 @ @ generic comment
983 @item
984 @tab
985 15 @ generic string
986 @end multitable
987
988 For example, the usual syntax value for @samp{(} is @code{(4 . 41)}.
989 (41 is the character code for @samp{)}.)
990
991 The flags are encoded in higher order bits, starting 16 bits from the
992 least significant bit. This table gives the power of two which
993 corresponds to each syntax flag.
994
995 @multitable @columnfractions .05 .3 .3 .3
996 @item
997 @tab
998 @i{Prefix} @i{Flag}
999 @tab
1000 @i{Prefix} @i{Flag}
1001 @tab
1002 @i{Prefix} @i{Flag}
1003 @item
1004 @tab
1005 @samp{1} @ @ @code{(lsh 1 16)}
1006 @tab
1007 @samp{4} @ @ @code{(lsh 1 19)}
1008 @tab
1009 @samp{b} @ @ @code{(lsh 1 21)}
1010 @item
1011 @tab
1012 @samp{2} @ @ @code{(lsh 1 17)}
1013 @tab
1014 @samp{p} @ @ @code{(lsh 1 20)}
1015 @tab
1016 @samp{n} @ @ @code{(lsh 1 22)}
1017 @item
1018 @tab
1019 @samp{3} @ @ @code{(lsh 1 18)}
1020 @end multitable
1021
1022 @defun string-to-syntax @var{desc}
1023 This function returns the internal form corresponding to the syntax
1024 descriptor @var{desc}, a cons cell @code{(@var{syntax-code}
1025 . @var{matching-char})}.
1026 @end defun
1027
1028 @defun syntax-after pos
1029 This function returns the syntax code of the character in the buffer
1030 after position @var{pos}, taking account of syntax properties as well
1031 as the syntax table. If @var{pos} is outside the buffer's accessible
1032 portion (@pxref{Narrowing, accessible portion}), this function returns
1033 @code{nil}.
1034 @end defun
1035
1036 @defun syntax-class syntax
1037 This function returns the syntax class of the syntax code
1038 @var{syntax}. (It masks off the high 16 bits that hold the flags
1039 encoded in the syntax descriptor.) If @var{syntax} is @code{nil}, it
1040 returns @code{nil}; this is so evaluating the expression
1041
1042 @example
1043 (syntax-class (syntax-after pos))
1044 @end example
1045
1046 @noindent
1047 where @code{pos} is outside the buffer's accessible portion, will
1048 yield @code{nil} without throwing errors or producing wrong syntax
1049 class codes.
1050 @end defun
1051
1052 @node Categories
1053 @section Categories
1054 @cindex categories of characters
1055 @cindex character categories
1056
1057 @dfn{Categories} provide an alternate way of classifying characters
1058 syntactically. You can define several categories as needed, then
1059 independently assign each character to one or more categories. Unlike
1060 syntax classes, categories are not mutually exclusive; it is normal for
1061 one character to belong to several categories.
1062
1063 @cindex category table
1064 Each buffer has a @dfn{category table} which records which categories
1065 are defined and also which characters belong to each category. Each
1066 category table defines its own categories, but normally these are
1067 initialized by copying from the standard categories table, so that the
1068 standard categories are available in all modes.
1069
1070 Each category has a name, which is an @acronym{ASCII} printing character in
1071 the range @w{@samp{ }} to @samp{~}. You specify the name of a category
1072 when you define it with @code{define-category}.
1073
1074 The category table is actually a char-table (@pxref{Char-Tables}).
1075 The element of the category table at index @var{c} is a @dfn{category
1076 set}---a bool-vector---that indicates which categories character @var{c}
1077 belongs to. In this category set, if the element at index @var{cat} is
1078 @code{t}, that means category @var{cat} is a member of the set, and that
1079 character @var{c} belongs to category @var{cat}.
1080
1081 For the next three functions, the optional argument @var{table}
1082 defaults to the current buffer's category table.
1083
1084 @defun define-category char docstring &optional table
1085 This function defines a new category, with name @var{char} and
1086 documentation @var{docstring}, for the category table @var{table}.
1087
1088 Here's an example of defining a new category for characters that have
1089 strong right-to-left directionality (@pxref{Bidirectional Display})
1090 and using it in a special category table:
1091
1092 @example
1093 (defvar special-category-table-for-bidi
1094 (let ((category-table (make-category-table))
1095 (uniprop-table (unicode-property-table-internal 'bidi-class)))
1096 (define-category ?R "Characters of bidi-class R, AL, or RLO"
1097 category-table)
1098 (map-char-table
1099 #'(lambda (key val)
1100 (if (memq val '(R AL RLO))
1101 (modify-category-entry key ?R category-table)))
1102 uniprop-table)
1103 category-table))
1104 @end example
1105 @end defun
1106
1107 @defun category-docstring category &optional table
1108 This function returns the documentation string of category @var{category}
1109 in category table @var{table}.
1110
1111 @example
1112 (category-docstring ?a)
1113 @result{} "ASCII"
1114 (category-docstring ?l)
1115 @result{} "Latin"
1116 @end example
1117 @end defun
1118
1119 @defun get-unused-category &optional table
1120 This function returns a category name (a character) which is not
1121 currently defined in @var{table}. If all possible categories are in use
1122 in @var{table}, it returns @code{nil}.
1123 @end defun
1124
1125 @defun category-table
1126 This function returns the current buffer's category table.
1127 @end defun
1128
1129 @defun category-table-p object
1130 This function returns @code{t} if @var{object} is a category table,
1131 otherwise @code{nil}.
1132 @end defun
1133
1134 @defun standard-category-table
1135 This function returns the standard category table.
1136 @end defun
1137
1138 @defun copy-category-table &optional table
1139 This function constructs a copy of @var{table} and returns it. If
1140 @var{table} is not supplied (or is @code{nil}), it returns a copy of the
1141 standard category table. Otherwise, an error is signaled if @var{table}
1142 is not a category table.
1143 @end defun
1144
1145 @defun set-category-table table
1146 This function makes @var{table} the category table for the current
1147 buffer. It returns @var{table}.
1148 @end defun
1149
1150 @defun make-category-table
1151 This creates and returns an empty category table. In an empty category
1152 table, no categories have been allocated, and no characters belong to
1153 any categories.
1154 @end defun
1155
1156 @defun make-category-set categories
1157 This function returns a new category set---a bool-vector---whose initial
1158 contents are the categories listed in the string @var{categories}. The
1159 elements of @var{categories} should be category names; the new category
1160 set has @code{t} for each of those categories, and @code{nil} for all
1161 other categories.
1162
1163 @example
1164 (make-category-set "al")
1165 @result{} #&128"\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\2\20\0\0"
1166 @end example
1167 @end defun
1168
1169 @defun char-category-set char
1170 This function returns the category set for character @var{char} in the
1171 current buffer's category table. This is the bool-vector which
1172 records which categories the character @var{char} belongs to. The
1173 function @code{char-category-set} does not allocate storage, because
1174 it returns the same bool-vector that exists in the category table.
1175
1176 @example
1177 (char-category-set ?a)
1178 @result{} #&128"\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\2\20\0\0"
1179 @end example
1180 @end defun
1181
1182 @defun category-set-mnemonics category-set
1183 This function converts the category set @var{category-set} into a string
1184 containing the characters that designate the categories that are members
1185 of the set.
1186
1187 @example
1188 (category-set-mnemonics (char-category-set ?a))
1189 @result{} "al"
1190 @end example
1191 @end defun
1192
1193 @defun modify-category-entry char category &optional table reset
1194 This function modifies the category set of @var{char} in category
1195 table @var{table} (which defaults to the current buffer's category
1196 table). @var{char} can be a character, or a cons cell of the form
1197 @code{(@var{min} . @var{max})}; in the latter case, the function
1198 modifies the category sets of all characters in the range between
1199 @var{min} and @var{max}, inclusive.
1200
1201 Normally, it modifies a category set by adding @var{category} to it.
1202 But if @var{reset} is non-@code{nil}, then it deletes @var{category}
1203 instead.
1204 @end defun
1205
1206 @deffn Command describe-categories &optional buffer-or-name
1207 This function describes the category specifications in the current
1208 category table. It inserts the descriptions in a buffer, and then
1209 displays that buffer. If @var{buffer-or-name} is non-@code{nil}, it
1210 describes the category table of that buffer instead.
1211 @end deffn