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annotate lispref/commands.texi @ 42811:cf0c0ef57504
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| author | Jason Rumney <jasonr@gnu.org> |
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| date | Thu, 17 Jan 2002 19:29:24 +0000 |
| parents | 68b26e98aef6 |
| children | 18b15c51ab25 |
| rev | line source |
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| 6260 | 1 @c -*-texinfo-*- |
| 2 @c This is part of the GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual. | |
| 27189 | 3 @c Copyright (C) 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1998, 1999 |
| 4 @c Free Software Foundation, Inc. | |
| 6260 | 5 @c See the file elisp.texi for copying conditions. |
| 6 @setfilename ../info/commands | |
| 7 @node Command Loop, Keymaps, Minibuffers, Top | |
| 8 @chapter Command Loop | |
| 9 @cindex editor command loop | |
| 10 @cindex command loop | |
| 11 | |
| 12 When you run Emacs, it enters the @dfn{editor command loop} almost | |
| 13 immediately. This loop reads key sequences, executes their definitions, | |
| 14 and displays the results. In this chapter, we describe how these things | |
| 15 are done, and the subroutines that allow Lisp programs to do them. | |
| 16 | |
| 17 @menu | |
| 18 * Command Overview:: How the command loop reads commands. | |
| 19 * Defining Commands:: Specifying how a function should read arguments. | |
| 20 * Interactive Call:: Calling a command, so that it will read arguments. | |
| 21 * Command Loop Info:: Variables set by the command loop for you to examine. | |
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22 * Adjusting Point:: Adjustment of point after a command. |
| 6260 | 23 * Input Events:: What input looks like when you read it. |
| 24 * Reading Input:: How to read input events from the keyboard or mouse. | |
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25 * Special Events:: Events processed immediately and individually. |
| 6260 | 26 * Waiting:: Waiting for user input or elapsed time. |
| 27 * Quitting:: How @kbd{C-g} works. How to catch or defer quitting. | |
| 28 * Prefix Command Arguments:: How the commands to set prefix args work. | |
| 29 * Recursive Editing:: Entering a recursive edit, | |
| 30 and why you usually shouldn't. | |
| 31 * Disabling Commands:: How the command loop handles disabled commands. | |
| 32 * Command History:: How the command history is set up, and how accessed. | |
| 33 * Keyboard Macros:: How keyboard macros are implemented. | |
| 34 @end menu | |
| 35 | |
| 36 @node Command Overview | |
| 37 @section Command Loop Overview | |
| 38 | |
| 39 The first thing the command loop must do is read a key sequence, which | |
| 40 is a sequence of events that translates into a command. It does this by | |
| 41 calling the function @code{read-key-sequence}. Your Lisp code can also | |
| 42 call this function (@pxref{Key Sequence Input}). Lisp programs can also | |
| 43 do input at a lower level with @code{read-event} (@pxref{Reading One | |
| 44 Event}) or discard pending input with @code{discard-input} | |
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45 (@pxref{Event Input Misc}). |
| 6260 | 46 |
| 47 The key sequence is translated into a command through the currently | |
| 48 active keymaps. @xref{Key Lookup}, for information on how this is done. | |
| 49 The result should be a keyboard macro or an interactively callable | |
| 50 function. If the key is @kbd{M-x}, then it reads the name of another | |
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51 command, which it then calls. This is done by the command |
| 6260 | 52 @code{execute-extended-command} (@pxref{Interactive Call}). |
| 53 | |
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54 To execute a command requires first reading the arguments for it. |
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55 This is done by calling @code{command-execute} (@pxref{Interactive |
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56 Call}). For commands written in Lisp, the @code{interactive} |
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57 specification says how to read the arguments. This may use the prefix |
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58 argument (@pxref{Prefix Command Arguments}) or may read with prompting |
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59 in the minibuffer (@pxref{Minibuffers}). For example, the command |
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60 @code{find-file} has an @code{interactive} specification which says to |
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61 read a file name using the minibuffer. The command's function body does |
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62 not use the minibuffer; if you call this command from Lisp code as a |
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63 function, you must supply the file name string as an ordinary Lisp |
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64 function argument. |
| 6260 | 65 |
| 66 If the command is a string or vector (i.e., a keyboard macro) then | |
| 67 @code{execute-kbd-macro} is used to execute it. You can call this | |
| 68 function yourself (@pxref{Keyboard Macros}). | |
| 69 | |
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70 To terminate the execution of a running command, type @kbd{C-g}. This |
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71 character causes @dfn{quitting} (@pxref{Quitting}). |
| 6260 | 72 |
| 73 @defvar pre-command-hook | |
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74 The editor command loop runs this normal hook before each command. At |
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75 that time, @code{this-command} contains the command that is about to |
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76 run, and @code{last-command} describes the previous command. |
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77 @xref{Hooks}. |
| 6260 | 78 @end defvar |
| 79 | |
| 80 @defvar post-command-hook | |
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81 The editor command loop runs this normal hook after each command |
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82 (including commands terminated prematurely by quitting or by errors), |
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83 and also when the command loop is first entered. At that time, |
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84 @code{this-command} describes the command that just ran, and |
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85 @code{last-command} describes the command before that. @xref{Hooks}. |
| 6260 | 86 @end defvar |
| 87 | |
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88 Quitting is suppressed while running @code{pre-command-hook} and |
| 12098 | 89 @code{post-command-hook}. If an error happens while executing one of |
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90 these hooks, it terminates execution of the hook, and clears the hook |
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91 variable to @code{nil} so as to prevent an infinite loop of errors. |
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92 |
| 6260 | 93 @node Defining Commands |
| 94 @section Defining Commands | |
| 95 @cindex defining commands | |
| 96 @cindex commands, defining | |
| 97 @cindex functions, making them interactive | |
| 98 @cindex interactive function | |
| 99 | |
| 100 A Lisp function becomes a command when its body contains, at top | |
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101 level, a form that calls the special form @code{interactive}. This |
| 6260 | 102 form does nothing when actually executed, but its presence serves as a |
| 103 flag to indicate that interactive calling is permitted. Its argument | |
| 104 controls the reading of arguments for an interactive call. | |
| 105 | |
| 106 @menu | |
| 107 * Using Interactive:: General rules for @code{interactive}. | |
| 108 * Interactive Codes:: The standard letter-codes for reading arguments | |
| 109 in various ways. | |
| 110 * Interactive Examples:: Examples of how to read interactive arguments. | |
| 111 @end menu | |
| 112 | |
| 113 @node Using Interactive | |
| 114 @subsection Using @code{interactive} | |
| 115 | |
| 116 This section describes how to write the @code{interactive} form that | |
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117 makes a Lisp function an interactively-callable command, and how to |
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118 examine a commands's @code{interactive} form. |
| 6260 | 119 |
| 120 @defspec interactive arg-descriptor | |
| 121 @cindex argument descriptors | |
| 122 This special form declares that the function in which it appears is a | |
| 123 command, and that it may therefore be called interactively (via | |
| 124 @kbd{M-x} or by entering a key sequence bound to it). The argument | |
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125 @var{arg-descriptor} declares how to compute the arguments to the |
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126 command when the command is called interactively. |
| 6260 | 127 |
| 128 A command may be called from Lisp programs like any other function, but | |
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129 then the caller supplies the arguments and @var{arg-descriptor} has no |
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130 effect. |
| 6260 | 131 |
| 132 The @code{interactive} form has its effect because the command loop | |
| 133 (actually, its subroutine @code{call-interactively}) scans through the | |
| 134 function definition looking for it, before calling the function. Once | |
| 135 the function is called, all its body forms including the | |
| 136 @code{interactive} form are executed, but at this time | |
| 137 @code{interactive} simply returns @code{nil} without even evaluating its | |
| 138 argument. | |
| 139 @end defspec | |
| 140 | |
| 141 There are three possibilities for the argument @var{arg-descriptor}: | |
| 142 | |
| 143 @itemize @bullet | |
| 144 @item | |
| 145 It may be omitted or @code{nil}; then the command is called with no | |
| 146 arguments. This leads quickly to an error if the command requires one | |
| 147 or more arguments. | |
| 148 | |
| 149 @item | |
| 150 It may be a Lisp expression that is not a string; then it should be a | |
| 151 form that is evaluated to get a list of arguments to pass to the | |
| 152 command. | |
| 153 @cindex argument evaluation form | |
| 154 | |
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155 If this expression reads keyboard input (this includes using the |
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156 minibuffer), keep in mind that the integer value of point or the mark |
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157 before reading input may be incorrect after reading input. This is |
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158 because the current buffer may be receiving subprocess output; |
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159 if subprocess output arrives while the command is waiting for input, |
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160 it could relocate point and the mark. |
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161 |
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162 Here's an example of what @emph{not} to do: |
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163 |
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164 @smallexample |
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165 (interactive |
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166 (list (region-beginning) (region-end) |
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167 (read-string "Foo: " nil 'my-history))) |
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168 @end smallexample |
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169 |
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170 @noindent |
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171 Here's how to avoid the problem, by examining point and the mark only |
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172 after reading the keyboard input: |
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173 |
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174 @smallexample |
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175 (interactive |
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176 (let ((string (read-string "Foo: " nil 'my-history))) |
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177 (list (region-beginning) (region-end) string))) |
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178 @end smallexample |
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179 |
| 6260 | 180 @item |
| 181 @cindex argument prompt | |
| 182 It may be a string; then its contents should consist of a code character | |
| 183 followed by a prompt (which some code characters use and some ignore). | |
| 184 The prompt ends either with the end of the string or with a newline. | |
| 185 Here is a simple example: | |
| 186 | |
| 187 @smallexample | |
| 188 (interactive "bFrobnicate buffer: ") | |
| 189 @end smallexample | |
| 190 | |
| 191 @noindent | |
| 192 The code letter @samp{b} says to read the name of an existing buffer, | |
| 193 with completion. The buffer name is the sole argument passed to the | |
| 194 command. The rest of the string is a prompt. | |
| 195 | |
| 196 If there is a newline character in the string, it terminates the prompt. | |
| 197 If the string does not end there, then the rest of the string should | |
| 198 contain another code character and prompt, specifying another argument. | |
| 199 You can specify any number of arguments in this way. | |
| 200 | |
| 201 @c Emacs 19 feature | |
| 202 The prompt string can use @samp{%} to include previous argument values | |
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203 (starting with the first argument) in the prompt. This is done using |
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204 @code{format} (@pxref{Formatting Strings}). For example, here is how |
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205 you could read the name of an existing buffer followed by a new name to |
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206 give to that buffer: |
| 6260 | 207 |
| 208 @smallexample | |
| 209 @group | |
| 210 (interactive "bBuffer to rename: \nsRename buffer %s to: ") | |
| 211 @end group | |
| 212 @end smallexample | |
| 213 | |
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214 @cindex @samp{*} in @code{interactive} |
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215 @cindex read-only buffers in interactive |
| 6260 | 216 If the first character in the string is @samp{*}, then an error is |
| 217 signaled if the buffer is read-only. | |
| 218 | |
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219 @cindex @samp{@@} in @code{interactive} |
| 6260 | 220 @c Emacs 19 feature |
| 221 If the first character in the string is @samp{@@}, and if the key | |
| 222 sequence used to invoke the command includes any mouse events, then | |
| 223 the window associated with the first of those events is selected | |
| 224 before the command is run. | |
| 225 | |
| 226 You can use @samp{*} and @samp{@@} together; the order does not matter. | |
| 227 Actual reading of arguments is controlled by the rest of the prompt | |
| 228 string (starting with the first character that is not @samp{*} or | |
| 229 @samp{@@}). | |
| 230 @end itemize | |
| 231 | |
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232 @cindex examining the @code{interactive} form |
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233 @defun interactive-form function |
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234 This function returns the @code{interactive} form of @var{function}. If |
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235 @var{function} is a command (@pxref{Interactive Call}), the value is a |
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236 list of the form @code{(interactive @var{spec})}, where @var{spec} is |
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237 the descriptor specification used by the command's @code{interactive} |
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238 form to compute the function's arguments (@pxref{Using Interactive}). |
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239 If @var{function} is not a command, @code{interactive-form} returns |
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240 @code{nil}. |
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241 @end defun |
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242 |
| 6260 | 243 @node Interactive Codes |
| 244 @comment node-name, next, previous, up | |
| 245 @subsection Code Characters for @code{interactive} | |
| 246 @cindex interactive code description | |
| 247 @cindex description for interactive codes | |
| 248 @cindex codes, interactive, description of | |
| 249 @cindex characters for interactive codes | |
| 250 | |
| 251 The code character descriptions below contain a number of key words, | |
| 252 defined here as follows: | |
| 253 | |
| 254 @table @b | |
| 255 @item Completion | |
| 256 @cindex interactive completion | |
| 257 Provide completion. @key{TAB}, @key{SPC}, and @key{RET} perform name | |
| 258 completion because the argument is read using @code{completing-read} | |
| 259 (@pxref{Completion}). @kbd{?} displays a list of possible completions. | |
| 260 | |
| 261 @item Existing | |
| 262 Require the name of an existing object. An invalid name is not | |
| 263 accepted; the commands to exit the minibuffer do not exit if the current | |
| 264 input is not valid. | |
| 265 | |
| 266 @item Default | |
| 267 @cindex default argument string | |
| 268 A default value of some sort is used if the user enters no text in the | |
| 269 minibuffer. The default depends on the code character. | |
| 270 | |
| 271 @item No I/O | |
| 272 This code letter computes an argument without reading any input. | |
| 273 Therefore, it does not use a prompt string, and any prompt string you | |
| 274 supply is ignored. | |
| 275 | |
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276 Even though the code letter doesn't use a prompt string, you must follow |
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277 it with a newline if it is not the last code character in the string. |
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278 |
| 6260 | 279 @item Prompt |
| 280 A prompt immediately follows the code character. The prompt ends either | |
| 281 with the end of the string or with a newline. | |
| 282 | |
| 283 @item Special | |
| 284 This code character is meaningful only at the beginning of the | |
| 285 interactive string, and it does not look for a prompt or a newline. | |
| 286 It is a single, isolated character. | |
| 287 @end table | |
| 288 | |
| 289 @cindex reading interactive arguments | |
| 290 Here are the code character descriptions for use with @code{interactive}: | |
| 291 | |
| 292 @table @samp | |
| 293 @item * | |
| 294 Signal an error if the current buffer is read-only. Special. | |
| 295 | |
| 296 @item @@ | |
| 297 Select the window mentioned in the first mouse event in the key | |
| 298 sequence that invoked this command. Special. | |
| 299 | |
| 300 @item a | |
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301 A function name (i.e., a symbol satisfying @code{fboundp}). Existing, |
| 6260 | 302 Completion, Prompt. |
| 303 | |
| 304 @item b | |
| 305 The name of an existing buffer. By default, uses the name of the | |
| 306 current buffer (@pxref{Buffers}). Existing, Completion, Default, | |
| 307 Prompt. | |
| 308 | |
| 309 @item B | |
| 310 A buffer name. The buffer need not exist. By default, uses the name of | |
| 311 a recently used buffer other than the current buffer. Completion, | |
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312 Default, Prompt. |
| 6260 | 313 |
| 314 @item c | |
| 315 A character. The cursor does not move into the echo area. Prompt. | |
| 316 | |
| 317 @item C | |
| 318 A command name (i.e., a symbol satisfying @code{commandp}). Existing, | |
| 319 Completion, Prompt. | |
| 320 | |
| 321 @item d | |
| 322 @cindex position argument | |
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323 The position of point, as an integer (@pxref{Point}). No I/O. |
| 6260 | 324 |
| 325 @item D | |
| 326 A directory name. The default is the current default directory of the | |
| 327 current buffer, @code{default-directory} (@pxref{System Environment}). | |
| 328 Existing, Completion, Default, Prompt. | |
| 329 | |
| 330 @item e | |
| 331 The first or next mouse event in the key sequence that invoked the command. | |
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332 More precisely, @samp{e} gets events that are lists, so you can look at |
| 6260 | 333 the data in the lists. @xref{Input Events}. No I/O. |
| 334 | |
| 335 You can use @samp{e} more than once in a single command's interactive | |
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336 specification. If the key sequence that invoked the command has |
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337 @var{n} events that are lists, the @var{n}th @samp{e} provides the |
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338 @var{n}th such event. Events that are not lists, such as function keys |
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339 and @sc{ascii} characters, do not count where @samp{e} is concerned. |
| 6260 | 340 |
| 341 @item f | |
| 342 A file name of an existing file (@pxref{File Names}). The default | |
| 343 directory is @code{default-directory}. Existing, Completion, Default, | |
| 344 Prompt. | |
| 345 | |
| 346 @item F | |
| 347 A file name. The file need not exist. Completion, Default, Prompt. | |
| 348 | |
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349 @item i |
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350 An irrelevant argument. This code always supplies @code{nil} as |
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351 the argument's value. No I/O. |
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352 |
| 6260 | 353 @item k |
| 354 A key sequence (@pxref{Keymap Terminology}). This keeps reading events | |
| 355 until a command (or undefined command) is found in the current key | |
| 356 maps. The key sequence argument is represented as a string or vector. | |
| 357 The cursor does not move into the echo area. Prompt. | |
| 358 | |
| 359 This kind of input is used by commands such as @code{describe-key} and | |
| 360 @code{global-set-key}. | |
| 361 | |
| 12067 | 362 @item K |
| 363 A key sequence, whose definition you intend to change. This works like | |
| 364 @samp{k}, except that it suppresses, for the last input event in the key | |
| 365 sequence, the conversions that are normally used (when necessary) to | |
| 366 convert an undefined key into a defined one. | |
| 367 | |
| 6260 | 368 @item m |
| 369 @cindex marker argument | |
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370 The position of the mark, as an integer. No I/O. |
| 6260 | 371 |
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372 @item M |
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373 Arbitrary text, read in the minibuffer using the current buffer's input |
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374 method, and returned as a string (@pxref{Input Methods,,, emacs, The GNU |
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375 Emacs Manual}). Prompt. |
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376 |
| 6260 | 377 @item n |
| 378 A number read with the minibuffer. If the input is not a number, the | |
| 379 user is asked to try again. The prefix argument, if any, is not used. | |
| 380 Prompt. | |
| 381 | |
| 382 @item N | |
| 383 @cindex raw prefix argument usage | |
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384 The numeric prefix argument; but if there is no prefix argument, read a |
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385 number as with @kbd{n}. Requires a number. @xref{Prefix Command |
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386 Arguments}. Prompt. |
| 6260 | 387 |
| 388 @item p | |
| 389 @cindex numeric prefix argument usage | |
| 390 The numeric prefix argument. (Note that this @samp{p} is lower case.) | |
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391 No I/O. |
| 6260 | 392 |
| 393 @item P | |
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394 The raw prefix argument. (Note that this @samp{P} is upper case.) No |
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395 I/O. |
| 6260 | 396 |
| 397 @item r | |
| 398 @cindex region argument | |
| 399 Point and the mark, as two numeric arguments, smallest first. This is | |
| 400 the only code letter that specifies two successive arguments rather than | |
| 401 one. No I/O. | |
| 402 | |
| 403 @item s | |
| 404 Arbitrary text, read in the minibuffer and returned as a string | |
| 405 (@pxref{Text from Minibuffer}). Terminate the input with either | |
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406 @kbd{C-j} or @key{RET}. (@kbd{C-q} may be used to include either of |
| 6260 | 407 these characters in the input.) Prompt. |
| 408 | |
| 409 @item S | |
| 410 An interned symbol whose name is read in the minibuffer. Any whitespace | |
| 411 character terminates the input. (Use @kbd{C-q} to include whitespace in | |
| 412 the string.) Other characters that normally terminate a symbol (e.g., | |
| 413 parentheses and brackets) do not do so here. Prompt. | |
| 414 | |
| 415 @item v | |
| 416 A variable declared to be a user option (i.e., satisfying the predicate | |
| 417 @code{user-variable-p}). @xref{High-Level Completion}. Existing, | |
| 418 Completion, Prompt. | |
| 419 | |
| 420 @item x | |
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421 A Lisp object, specified with its read syntax, terminated with a |
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422 @kbd{C-j} or @key{RET}. The object is not evaluated. @xref{Object from |
| 6260 | 423 Minibuffer}. Prompt. |
| 424 | |
| 425 @item X | |
| 426 @cindex evaluated expression argument | |
| 427 A Lisp form is read as with @kbd{x}, but then evaluated so that its | |
| 428 value becomes the argument for the command. Prompt. | |
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429 |
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430 @item z |
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431 A coding system name (a symbol). If the user enters null input, the |
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432 argument value is @code{nil}. @xref{Coding Systems}. Completion, |
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433 Existing, Prompt. |
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434 |
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435 @item Z |
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436 A coding system name (a symbol)---but only if this command has a prefix |
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437 argument. With no prefix argument, @samp{Z} provides @code{nil} as the |
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438 argument value. Completion, Existing, Prompt. |
| 6260 | 439 @end table |
| 440 | |
| 441 @node Interactive Examples | |
| 442 @comment node-name, next, previous, up | |
| 443 @subsection Examples of Using @code{interactive} | |
| 444 @cindex examples of using @code{interactive} | |
| 445 @cindex @code{interactive}, examples of using | |
| 446 | |
| 447 Here are some examples of @code{interactive}: | |
| 448 | |
| 449 @example | |
| 450 @group | |
| 451 (defun foo1 () ; @r{@code{foo1} takes no arguments,} | |
| 452 (interactive) ; @r{just moves forward two words.} | |
| 453 (forward-word 2)) | |
| 454 @result{} foo1 | |
| 455 @end group | |
| 456 | |
| 457 @group | |
| 458 (defun foo2 (n) ; @r{@code{foo2} takes one argument,} | |
| 459 (interactive "p") ; @r{which is the numeric prefix.} | |
| 460 (forward-word (* 2 n))) | |
| 461 @result{} foo2 | |
| 462 @end group | |
| 463 | |
| 464 @group | |
| 465 (defun foo3 (n) ; @r{@code{foo3} takes one argument,} | |
| 466 (interactive "nCount:") ; @r{which is read with the Minibuffer.} | |
| 467 (forward-word (* 2 n))) | |
| 468 @result{} foo3 | |
| 469 @end group | |
| 470 | |
| 471 @group | |
| 472 (defun three-b (b1 b2 b3) | |
| 473 "Select three existing buffers. | |
| 474 Put them into three windows, selecting the last one." | |
| 475 @end group | |
| 476 (interactive "bBuffer1:\nbBuffer2:\nbBuffer3:") | |
| 477 (delete-other-windows) | |
| 478 (split-window (selected-window) 8) | |
| 479 (switch-to-buffer b1) | |
| 480 (other-window 1) | |
| 481 (split-window (selected-window) 8) | |
| 482 (switch-to-buffer b2) | |
| 483 (other-window 1) | |
| 484 (switch-to-buffer b3)) | |
| 485 @result{} three-b | |
| 486 @group | |
| 487 (three-b "*scratch*" "declarations.texi" "*mail*") | |
| 488 @result{} nil | |
| 489 @end group | |
| 490 @end example | |
| 491 | |
| 492 @node Interactive Call | |
| 493 @section Interactive Call | |
| 494 @cindex interactive call | |
| 495 | |
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496 After the command loop has translated a key sequence into a command it |
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497 invokes that command using the function @code{command-execute}. If the |
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498 command is a function, @code{command-execute} calls |
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499 @code{call-interactively}, which reads the arguments and calls the |
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500 command. You can also call these functions yourself. |
| 6260 | 501 |
| 502 @defun commandp object | |
| 503 Returns @code{t} if @var{object} is suitable for calling interactively; | |
| 504 that is, if @var{object} is a command. Otherwise, returns @code{nil}. | |
| 505 | |
| 506 The interactively callable objects include strings and vectors (treated | |
| 507 as keyboard macros), lambda expressions that contain a top-level call to | |
| 12098 | 508 @code{interactive}, byte-code function objects made from such lambda |
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509 expressions, autoload objects that are declared as interactive |
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510 (non-@code{nil} fourth argument to @code{autoload}), and some of the |
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511 primitive functions. |
| 6260 | 512 |
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513 A symbol satisfies @code{commandp} if its function definition satisfies |
| 6260 | 514 @code{commandp}. |
| 515 | |
| 516 Keys and keymaps are not commands. Rather, they are used to look up | |
| 517 commands (@pxref{Keymaps}). | |
| 518 | |
| 519 See @code{documentation} in @ref{Accessing Documentation}, for a | |
| 520 realistic example of using @code{commandp}. | |
| 521 @end defun | |
| 522 | |
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523 @defun call-interactively command &optional record-flag keys |
| 6260 | 524 This function calls the interactively callable function @var{command}, |
| 525 reading arguments according to its interactive calling specifications. | |
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526 An error is signaled if @var{command} is not a function or if it cannot |
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527 be called interactively (i.e., is not a command). Note that keyboard |
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528 macros (strings and vectors) are not accepted, even though they are |
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529 considered commands, because they are not functions. |
| 6260 | 530 |
| 531 @cindex record command history | |
| 532 If @var{record-flag} is non-@code{nil}, then this command and its | |
| 533 arguments are unconditionally added to the list @code{command-history}. | |
| 534 Otherwise, the command is added only if it uses the minibuffer to read | |
| 535 an argument. @xref{Command History}. | |
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536 |
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537 The argument @var{keys}, if given, specifies the sequence of events to |
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538 supply if the command inquires which events were used to invoke it. |
| 6260 | 539 @end defun |
| 540 | |
| 26288 | 541 @defun command-execute command &optional record-flag keys special |
| 6260 | 542 @cindex keyboard macro execution |
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543 This function executes @var{command}. The argument @var{command} must |
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544 satisfy the @code{commandp} predicate; i.e., it must be an interactively |
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545 callable function or a keyboard macro. |
| 6260 | 546 |
| 547 A string or vector as @var{command} is executed with | |
| 548 @code{execute-kbd-macro}. A function is passed to | |
| 549 @code{call-interactively}, along with the optional @var{record-flag}. | |
| 550 | |
| 551 A symbol is handled by using its function definition in its place. A | |
| 552 symbol with an @code{autoload} definition counts as a command if it was | |
| 553 declared to stand for an interactively callable function. Such a | |
| 554 definition is handled by loading the specified library and then | |
| 555 rechecking the definition of the symbol. | |
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556 |
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557 The argument @var{keys}, if given, specifies the sequence of events to |
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558 supply if the command inquires which events were used to invoke it. |
| 26288 | 559 |
| 560 The argument @var{special}, if given, means to ignore the prefix | |
| 561 argument and not clear it. This is used for executing special events | |
| 562 (@pxref{Special Events}). | |
| 6260 | 563 @end defun |
| 564 | |
| 565 @deffn Command execute-extended-command prefix-argument | |
| 566 @cindex read command name | |
| 567 This function reads a command name from the minibuffer using | |
| 568 @code{completing-read} (@pxref{Completion}). Then it uses | |
| 569 @code{command-execute} to call the specified command. Whatever that | |
| 570 command returns becomes the value of @code{execute-extended-command}. | |
| 571 | |
| 572 @cindex execute with prefix argument | |
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573 If the command asks for a prefix argument, it receives the value |
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574 @var{prefix-argument}. If @code{execute-extended-command} is called |
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575 interactively, the current raw prefix argument is used for |
| 6260 | 576 @var{prefix-argument}, and thus passed on to whatever command is run. |
| 577 | |
| 578 @c !!! Should this be @kindex? | |
| 579 @cindex @kbd{M-x} | |
| 580 @code{execute-extended-command} is the normal definition of @kbd{M-x}, | |
| 581 so it uses the string @w{@samp{M-x }} as a prompt. (It would be better | |
| 582 to take the prompt from the events used to invoke | |
| 583 @code{execute-extended-command}, but that is painful to implement.) A | |
| 584 description of the value of the prefix argument, if any, also becomes | |
| 585 part of the prompt. | |
| 586 | |
| 587 @example | |
| 588 @group | |
| 589 (execute-extended-command 1) | |
| 590 ---------- Buffer: Minibuffer ---------- | |
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591 1 M-x forward-word RET |
| 6260 | 592 ---------- Buffer: Minibuffer ---------- |
| 593 @result{} t | |
| 594 @end group | |
| 595 @end example | |
| 596 @end deffn | |
| 597 | |
| 598 @defun interactive-p | |
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599 This function returns @code{t} if the containing function (the one whose |
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600 code includes the call to @code{interactive-p}) was called |
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601 interactively, with the function @code{call-interactively}. (It makes |
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602 no difference whether @code{call-interactively} was called from Lisp or |
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603 directly from the editor command loop.) If the containing function was |
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604 called by Lisp evaluation (or with @code{apply} or @code{funcall}), then |
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605 it was not called interactively. |
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606 @end defun |
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607 |
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608 The most common use of @code{interactive-p} is for deciding whether to |
| 6260 | 609 print an informative message. As a special exception, |
| 610 @code{interactive-p} returns @code{nil} whenever a keyboard macro is | |
| 611 being run. This is to suppress the informative messages and speed | |
| 612 execution of the macro. | |
| 613 | |
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614 For example: |
| 6260 | 615 |
| 616 @example | |
| 617 @group | |
| 618 (defun foo () | |
| 619 (interactive) | |
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620 (when (interactive-p) |
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621 (message "foo"))) |
| 6260 | 622 @result{} foo |
| 623 @end group | |
| 624 | |
| 625 @group | |
| 626 (defun bar () | |
| 627 (interactive) | |
| 628 (setq foobar (list (foo) (interactive-p)))) | |
| 629 @result{} bar | |
| 630 @end group | |
| 631 | |
| 632 @group | |
| 633 ;; @r{Type @kbd{M-x foo}.} | |
| 634 @print{} foo | |
| 635 @end group | |
| 636 | |
| 637 @group | |
| 638 ;; @r{Type @kbd{M-x bar}.} | |
| 639 ;; @r{This does not print anything.} | |
| 640 @end group | |
| 641 | |
| 642 @group | |
| 643 foobar | |
| 644 @result{} (nil t) | |
| 645 @end group | |
| 646 @end example | |
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647 |
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648 The other way to do this sort of job is to make the command take an |
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649 argument @code{print-message} which should be non-@code{nil} in an |
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650 interactive call, and use the @code{interactive} spec to make sure it is |
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651 non-@code{nil}. Here's how: |
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652 |
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653 @example |
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654 (defun foo (&optional print-message) |
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655 (interactive "p") |
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656 (when print-message |
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657 (message "foo"))) |
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658 @end example |
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659 |
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660 The numeric prefix argument, provided by @samp{p}, is never @code{nil}. |
| 6260 | 661 |
| 662 @node Command Loop Info | |
| 663 @comment node-name, next, previous, up | |
| 664 @section Information from the Command Loop | |
| 665 | |
| 666 The editor command loop sets several Lisp variables to keep status | |
| 667 records for itself and for commands that are run. | |
| 668 | |
| 669 @defvar last-command | |
| 670 This variable records the name of the previous command executed by the | |
| 671 command loop (the one before the current command). Normally the value | |
| 672 is a symbol with a function definition, but this is not guaranteed. | |
| 673 | |
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674 The value is copied from @code{this-command} when a command returns to |
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675 the command loop, except when the command has specified a prefix |
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676 argument for the following command. |
| 12098 | 677 |
| 678 This variable is always local to the current terminal and cannot be | |
| 679 buffer-local. @xref{Multiple Displays}. | |
| 6260 | 680 @end defvar |
| 681 | |
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682 @defvar real-last-command |
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683 This variable is set up by Emacs just like @code{last-command}, |
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684 but never altered by Lisp programs. |
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685 @end defvar |
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686 |
| 6260 | 687 @defvar this-command |
| 688 @cindex current command | |
| 689 This variable records the name of the command now being executed by | |
| 690 the editor command loop. Like @code{last-command}, it is normally a symbol | |
| 691 with a function definition. | |
| 692 | |
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693 The command loop sets this variable just before running a command, and |
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694 copies its value into @code{last-command} when the command finishes |
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695 (unless the command specified a prefix argument for the following |
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696 command). |
| 6260 | 697 |
| 698 @cindex kill command repetition | |
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699 Some commands set this variable during their execution, as a flag for |
| 12098 | 700 whatever command runs next. In particular, the functions for killing text |
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701 set @code{this-command} to @code{kill-region} so that any kill commands |
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702 immediately following will know to append the killed text to the |
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703 previous kill. |
| 6260 | 704 @end defvar |
| 705 | |
| 706 If you do not want a particular command to be recognized as the previous | |
| 707 command in the case where it got an error, you must code that command to | |
| 708 prevent this. One way is to set @code{this-command} to @code{t} at the | |
| 709 beginning of the command, and set @code{this-command} back to its proper | |
| 710 value at the end, like this: | |
| 711 | |
| 712 @example | |
| 713 (defun foo (args@dots{}) | |
| 714 (interactive @dots{}) | |
| 715 (let ((old-this-command this-command)) | |
| 716 (setq this-command t) | |
| 717 @r{@dots{}do the work@dots{}} | |
| 718 (setq this-command old-this-command))) | |
| 719 @end example | |
| 720 | |
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721 @noindent |
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722 We do not bind @code{this-command} with @code{let} because that would |
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723 restore the old value in case of error---a feature of @code{let} which |
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724 in this case does precisely what we want to avoid. |
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725 |
| 6260 | 726 @defun this-command-keys |
| 727 This function returns a string or vector containing the key sequence | |
| 728 that invoked the present command, plus any previous commands that | |
| 729 generated the prefix argument for this command. The value is a string | |
| 730 if all those events were characters. @xref{Input Events}. | |
| 731 | |
| 732 @example | |
| 733 @group | |
| 734 (this-command-keys) | |
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735 ;; @r{Now use @kbd{C-u C-x C-e} to evaluate that.} |
| 6260 | 736 @result{} "^U^X^E" |
| 737 @end group | |
| 738 @end example | |
| 739 @end defun | |
| 740 | |
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741 @defun this-command-keys-vector |
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742 Like @code{this-command-keys}, except that it always returns the events |
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743 in a vector, so you don't need to deal with the complexities of storing |
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744 input events in a string (@pxref{Strings of Events}). |
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745 @end defun |
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746 |
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747 @tindex clear-this-command-keys |
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748 @defun clear-this-command-keys |
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749 This function empties out the table of events for |
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750 @code{this-command-keys} to return, and also empties the records that |
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751 the function @code{recent-keys} (@pxref{Recording Input}) will |
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752 subsequently return. This is useful after reading a password, to |
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753 prevent the password from echoing inadvertently as part of the next |
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754 command in certain cases. |
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755 @end defun |
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756 |
| 6260 | 757 @defvar last-nonmenu-event |
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758 This variable holds the last input event read as part of a key sequence, |
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759 not counting events resulting from mouse menus. |
| 6260 | 760 |
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761 One use of this variable is for telling @code{x-popup-menu} where to pop |
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762 up a menu. It is also used internally by @code{y-or-n-p} |
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763 (@pxref{Yes-or-No Queries}). |
| 6260 | 764 @end defvar |
| 765 | |
| 766 @defvar last-command-event | |
| 767 @defvarx last-command-char | |
| 768 This variable is set to the last input event that was read by the | |
| 769 command loop as part of a command. The principal use of this variable | |
| 770 is in @code{self-insert-command}, which uses it to decide which | |
| 771 character to insert. | |
| 772 | |
| 773 @example | |
| 774 @group | |
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775 last-command-event |
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776 ;; @r{Now use @kbd{C-u C-x C-e} to evaluate that.} |
| 6260 | 777 @result{} 5 |
| 778 @end group | |
| 779 @end example | |
| 780 | |
| 781 @noindent | |
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782 The value is 5 because that is the @sc{ascii} code for @kbd{C-e}. |
| 6260 | 783 |
| 784 The alias @code{last-command-char} exists for compatibility with | |
| 785 Emacs version 18. | |
| 786 @end defvar | |
| 787 | |
| 788 @c Emacs 19 feature | |
| 789 @defvar last-event-frame | |
| 790 This variable records which frame the last input event was directed to. | |
| 791 Usually this is the frame that was selected when the event was | |
| 792 generated, but if that frame has redirected input focus to another | |
| 793 frame, the value is the frame to which the event was redirected. | |
| 794 @xref{Input Focus}. | |
| 795 @end defvar | |
| 796 | |
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797 @node Adjusting Point |
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798 @section Adjusting Point After Commands |
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799 |
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800 It is not easy to display a value of point in the middle of a sequence |
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801 of text that has the @code{display} or @code{composition} property. So |
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802 after a command finishes and returns to the command loop, if point is |
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803 within such a sequence, the command loop normally moves point to the |
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804 edge of the sequence. |
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805 |
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806 A command can inhibit this feature by setting the variable |
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807 @code{disable-point-adjustment}: |
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808 |
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809 @defvar disable-point-adjustment |
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810 @tindex disable-point-adjustment |
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811 If this variable is non-@code{nil} when a command returns to the command |
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812 loop, then the command loop does not check for text properties such as |
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813 @code{display} and @code{composition}, and does not move point out of |
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814 sequences that have these properties. |
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815 |
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816 The command loop sets this variable to @code{nil} before each command, |
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817 so if a command sets it, the effect applies only to that command. |
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818 @end defvar |
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819 |
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820 @defvar global-disable-point-adjustment |
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821 @tindex global-disable-point-adjustment |
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822 If you set this variable to a non-@code{nil} value, the feature of |
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823 moving point out of these sequences is completely turned off. |
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824 @end defvar |
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825 |
| 6260 | 826 @node Input Events |
| 827 @section Input Events | |
| 828 @cindex events | |
| 829 @cindex input events | |
| 830 | |
| 831 The Emacs command loop reads a sequence of @dfn{input events} that | |
| 832 represent keyboard or mouse activity. The events for keyboard activity | |
| 833 are characters or symbols; mouse events are always lists. This section | |
| 834 describes the representation and meaning of input events in detail. | |
| 835 | |
| 836 @defun eventp object | |
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837 This function returns non-@code{nil} if @var{object} is an input event |
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838 or event type. |
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839 |
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840 Note that any symbol might be used as an event or an event type. |
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841 @code{eventp} cannot distinguish whether a symbol is intended by Lisp |
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842 code to be used as an event. Instead, it distinguishes whether the |
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843 symbol has actually been used in an event that has been read as input in |
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844 the current Emacs session. If a symbol has not yet been so used, |
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845 @code{eventp} returns @code{nil}. |
| 6260 | 846 @end defun |
| 847 | |
| 848 @menu | |
| 849 * Keyboard Events:: Ordinary characters--keys with symbols on them. | |
| 850 * Function Keys:: Function keys--keys with names, not symbols. | |
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851 * Mouse Events:: Overview of mouse events. |
| 6260 | 852 * Click Events:: Pushing and releasing a mouse button. |
| 853 * Drag Events:: Moving the mouse before releasing the button. | |
| 854 * Button-Down Events:: A button was pushed and not yet released. | |
| 855 * Repeat Events:: Double and triple click (or drag, or down). | |
| 856 * Motion Events:: Just moving the mouse, not pushing a button. | |
| 857 * Focus Events:: Moving the mouse between frames. | |
| 12067 | 858 * Misc Events:: Other events window systems can generate. |
| 6260 | 859 * Event Examples:: Examples of the lists for mouse events. |
| 860 * Classifying Events:: Finding the modifier keys in an event symbol. | |
| 861 Event types. | |
| 862 * Accessing Events:: Functions to extract info from events. | |
| 863 * Strings of Events:: Special considerations for putting | |
| 864 keyboard character events in a string. | |
| 865 @end menu | |
| 866 | |
| 867 @node Keyboard Events | |
| 868 @subsection Keyboard Events | |
| 869 | |
| 870 There are two kinds of input you can get from the keyboard: ordinary | |
| 871 keys, and function keys. Ordinary keys correspond to characters; the | |
|
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872 events they generate are represented in Lisp as characters. The event |
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873 type of a character event is the character itself (an integer); see |
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874 @ref{Classifying Events}. |
| 6260 | 875 |
| 876 @cindex modifier bits (of input character) | |
| 877 @cindex basic code (of input character) | |
| 878 An input character event consists of a @dfn{basic code} between 0 and | |
|
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879 524287, plus any or all of these @dfn{modifier bits}: |
| 6260 | 880 |
| 881 @table @asis | |
| 882 @item meta | |
| 12098 | 883 The |
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884 @tex |
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885 @math{2^{27}} |
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886 @end tex |
| 27193 | 887 @ifnottex |
| 12098 | 888 2**27 |
| 27193 | 889 @end ifnottex |
| 12098 | 890 bit in the character code indicates a character |
| 6260 | 891 typed with the meta key held down. |
| 892 | |
| 893 @item control | |
| 12098 | 894 The |
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895 @tex |
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896 @math{2^{26}} |
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897 @end tex |
| 27193 | 898 @ifnottex |
| 12098 | 899 2**26 |
| 27193 | 900 @end ifnottex |
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901 bit in the character code indicates a non-@sc{ascii} |
| 6260 | 902 control character. |
| 903 | |
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904 @sc{ascii} control characters such as @kbd{C-a} have special basic |
| 6260 | 905 codes of their own, so Emacs needs no special bit to indicate them. |
| 906 Thus, the code for @kbd{C-a} is just 1. | |
| 907 | |
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908 But if you type a control combination not in @sc{ascii}, such as |
| 6260 | 909 @kbd{%} with the control key, the numeric value you get is the code |
| 12098 | 910 for @kbd{%} plus |
|
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911 @tex |
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912 @math{2^{26}} |
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913 @end tex |
| 27193 | 914 @ifnottex |
| 12098 | 915 2**26 |
| 27193 | 916 @end ifnottex |
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917 (assuming the terminal supports non-@sc{ascii} |
| 6260 | 918 control characters). |
| 919 | |
| 920 @item shift | |
| 12098 | 921 The |
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922 @tex |
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923 @math{2^{25}} |
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924 @end tex |
| 27193 | 925 @ifnottex |
| 12098 | 926 2**25 |
| 27193 | 927 @end ifnottex |
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928 bit in the character code indicates an @sc{ascii} control |
| 6260 | 929 character typed with the shift key held down. |
| 930 | |
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931 For letters, the basic code itself indicates upper versus lower case; |
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932 for digits and punctuation, the shift key selects an entirely different |
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933 character with a different basic code. In order to keep within the |
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934 @sc{ascii} character set whenever possible, Emacs avoids using the |
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935 @tex |
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936 @math{2^{25}} |
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937 @end tex |
| 27193 | 938 @ifnottex |
| 12098 | 939 2**25 |
| 27193 | 940 @end ifnottex |
| 12098 | 941 bit for those characters. |
| 6260 | 942 |
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943 However, @sc{ascii} provides no way to distinguish @kbd{C-A} from |
| 12098 | 944 @kbd{C-a}, so Emacs uses the |
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945 @tex |
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946 @math{2^{25}} |
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947 @end tex |
| 27193 | 948 @ifnottex |
| 12098 | 949 2**25 |
| 27193 | 950 @end ifnottex |
| 12098 | 951 bit in @kbd{C-A} and not in |
| 6260 | 952 @kbd{C-a}. |
| 953 | |
| 954 @item hyper | |
| 12098 | 955 The |
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956 @tex |
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957 @math{2^{24}} |
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958 @end tex |
| 27193 | 959 @ifnottex |
| 12098 | 960 2**24 |
| 27193 | 961 @end ifnottex |
| 12098 | 962 bit in the character code indicates a character |
| 6260 | 963 typed with the hyper key held down. |
| 964 | |
| 965 @item super | |
| 12098 | 966 The |
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967 @tex |
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968 @math{2^{23}} |
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969 @end tex |
| 27193 | 970 @ifnottex |
| 12098 | 971 2**23 |
| 27193 | 972 @end ifnottex |
| 12098 | 973 bit in the character code indicates a character |
| 6260 | 974 typed with the super key held down. |
| 975 | |
| 976 @item alt | |
| 12098 | 977 The |
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978 @tex |
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979 @math{2^{22}} |
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980 @end tex |
| 27193 | 981 @ifnottex |
| 12098 | 982 2**22 |
| 27193 | 983 @end ifnottex |
| 12098 | 984 bit in the character code indicates a character typed with |
| 6260 | 985 the alt key held down. (On some terminals, the key labeled @key{ALT} |
| 986 is actually the meta key.) | |
| 987 @end table | |
| 988 | |
| 12098 | 989 It is best to avoid mentioning specific bit numbers in your program. |
| 990 To test the modifier bits of a character, use the function | |
| 991 @code{event-modifiers} (@pxref{Classifying Events}). When making key | |
| 992 bindings, you can use the read syntax for characters with modifier bits | |
| 993 (@samp{\C-}, @samp{\M-}, and so on). For making key bindings with | |
| 994 @code{define-key}, you can use lists such as @code{(control hyper ?x)} to | |
| 995 specify the characters (@pxref{Changing Key Bindings}). The function | |
| 996 @code{event-convert-list} converts such a list into an event type | |
| 997 (@pxref{Classifying Events}). | |
| 6260 | 998 |
| 999 @node Function Keys | |
| 1000 @subsection Function Keys | |
| 1001 | |
| 1002 @cindex function keys | |
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1003 Most keyboards also have @dfn{function keys}---keys that have names or |
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1004 symbols that are not characters. Function keys are represented in Emacs |
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1005 Lisp as symbols; the symbol's name is the function key's label, in lower |
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1006 case. For example, pressing a key labeled @key{F1} places the symbol |
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1007 @code{f1} in the input stream. |
| 6260 | 1008 |
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1009 The event type of a function key event is the event symbol itself. |
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1010 @xref{Classifying Events}. |
| 6260 | 1011 |
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1012 Here are a few special cases in the symbol-naming convention for |
| 6260 | 1013 function keys: |
| 1014 | |
| 1015 @table @asis | |
| 1016 @item @code{backspace}, @code{tab}, @code{newline}, @code{return}, @code{delete} | |
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1017 These keys correspond to common @sc{ascii} control characters that have |
| 6260 | 1018 special keys on most keyboards. |
| 1019 | |
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1020 In @sc{ascii}, @kbd{C-i} and @key{TAB} are the same character. If the |
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1021 terminal can distinguish between them, Emacs conveys the distinction to |
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1022 Lisp programs by representing the former as the integer 9, and the |
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1023 latter as the symbol @code{tab}. |
| 6260 | 1024 |
| 1025 Most of the time, it's not useful to distinguish the two. So normally | |
| 15764 | 1026 @code{function-key-map} (@pxref{Translating Input}) is set up to map |
| 1027 @code{tab} into 9. Thus, a key binding for character code 9 (the | |
| 1028 character @kbd{C-i}) also applies to @code{tab}. Likewise for the other | |
| 1029 symbols in this group. The function @code{read-char} likewise converts | |
| 1030 these events into characters. | |
| 6260 | 1031 |
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1032 In @sc{ascii}, @key{BS} is really @kbd{C-h}. But @code{backspace} |
| 6260 | 1033 converts into the character code 127 (@key{DEL}), not into code 8 |
| 1034 (@key{BS}). This is what most users prefer. | |
| 1035 | |
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1036 @item @code{left}, @code{up}, @code{right}, @code{down} |
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1037 Cursor arrow keys |
| 6260 | 1038 @item @code{kp-add}, @code{kp-decimal}, @code{kp-divide}, @dots{} |
| 1039 Keypad keys (to the right of the regular keyboard). | |
| 1040 @item @code{kp-0}, @code{kp-1}, @dots{} | |
| 1041 Keypad keys with digits. | |
| 1042 @item @code{kp-f1}, @code{kp-f2}, @code{kp-f3}, @code{kp-f4} | |
| 1043 Keypad PF keys. | |
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1044 @item @code{kp-home}, @code{kp-left}, @code{kp-up}, @code{kp-right}, @code{kp-down} |
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1045 Keypad arrow keys. Emacs normally translates these into the |
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1046 corresponding non-keypad keys @code{home}, @code{left}, @dots{} |
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1047 @item @code{kp-prior}, @code{kp-next}, @code{kp-end}, @code{kp-begin}, @code{kp-insert}, @code{kp-delete} |
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1048 Additional keypad duplicates of keys ordinarily found elsewhere. Emacs |
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1049 normally translates these into the like-named non-keypad keys. |
| 6260 | 1050 @end table |
| 1051 | |
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1052 You can use the modifier keys @key{ALT}, @key{CTRL}, @key{HYPER}, |
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1053 @key{META}, @key{SHIFT}, and @key{SUPER} with function keys. The way to |
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1054 represent them is with prefixes in the symbol name: |
| 6260 | 1055 |
| 1056 @table @samp | |
| 1057 @item A- | |
| 1058 The alt modifier. | |
| 1059 @item C- | |
| 1060 The control modifier. | |
| 1061 @item H- | |
| 1062 The hyper modifier. | |
| 1063 @item M- | |
| 1064 The meta modifier. | |
| 1065 @item S- | |
| 1066 The shift modifier. | |
| 1067 @item s- | |
| 1068 The super modifier. | |
| 1069 @end table | |
| 1070 | |
| 1071 Thus, the symbol for the key @key{F3} with @key{META} held down is | |
| 8532 | 1072 @code{M-f3}. When you use more than one prefix, we recommend you |
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1073 write them in alphabetical order; but the order does not matter in |
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1074 arguments to the key-binding lookup and modification functions. |
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1075 |
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1076 @node Mouse Events |
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1077 @subsection Mouse Events |
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1078 |
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1079 Emacs supports four kinds of mouse events: click events, drag events, |
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1080 button-down events, and motion events. All mouse events are represented |
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1081 as lists. The @sc{car} of the list is the event type; this says which |
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1082 mouse button was involved, and which modifier keys were used with it. |
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1083 The event type can also distinguish double or triple button presses |
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1084 (@pxref{Repeat Events}). The rest of the list elements give position |
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1085 and time information. |
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1086 |
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1087 For key lookup, only the event type matters: two events of the same type |
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1088 necessarily run the same command. The command can access the full |
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1089 values of these events using the @samp{e} interactive code. |
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1090 @xref{Interactive Codes}. |
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1091 |
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1092 A key sequence that starts with a mouse event is read using the keymaps |
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1093 of the buffer in the window that the mouse was in, not the current |
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1094 buffer. This does not imply that clicking in a window selects that |
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1095 window or its buffer---that is entirely under the control of the command |
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1096 binding of the key sequence. |
| 6260 | 1097 |
| 1098 @node Click Events | |
| 1099 @subsection Click Events | |
| 1100 @cindex click event | |
| 1101 @cindex mouse click event | |
| 1102 | |
| 1103 When the user presses a mouse button and releases it at the same | |
| 1104 location, that generates a @dfn{click} event. Mouse click events have | |
| 1105 this form: | |
| 1106 | |
| 1107 @example | |
| 1108 (@var{event-type} | |
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1109 (@var{window} @var{buffer-pos} (@var{x} . @var{y}) @var{timestamp}) |
| 6260 | 1110 @var{click-count}) |
| 1111 @end example | |
| 1112 | |
| 1113 Here is what the elements normally mean: | |
| 1114 | |
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1115 @table @asis |
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1116 @item @var{event-type} |
| 6260 | 1117 This is a symbol that indicates which mouse button was used. It is |
| 1118 one of the symbols @code{mouse-1}, @code{mouse-2}, @dots{}, where the | |
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1119 buttons are numbered left to right. |
| 6260 | 1120 |
| 1121 You can also use prefixes @samp{A-}, @samp{C-}, @samp{H-}, @samp{M-}, | |
| 1122 @samp{S-} and @samp{s-} for modifiers alt, control, hyper, meta, shift | |
| 1123 and super, just as you would with function keys. | |
| 1124 | |
| 1125 This symbol also serves as the event type of the event. Key bindings | |
| 1126 describe events by their types; thus, if there is a key binding for | |
| 1127 @code{mouse-1}, that binding would apply to all events whose | |
| 1128 @var{event-type} is @code{mouse-1}. | |
| 1129 | |
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1130 @item @var{window} |
| 6260 | 1131 This is the window in which the click occurred. |
| 1132 | |
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1133 @item @var{x}, @var{y} |
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1134 These are the pixel-denominated coordinates of the click, relative to |
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1135 the top left corner of @var{window}, which is @code{(0 . 0)}. |
| 6260 | 1136 |
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1137 @item @var{buffer-pos} |
| 6260 | 1138 This is the buffer position of the character clicked on. |
| 1139 | |
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1140 @item @var{timestamp} |
| 6260 | 1141 This is the time at which the event occurred, in milliseconds. (Since |
| 1142 this value wraps around the entire range of Emacs Lisp integers in about | |
| 1143 five hours, it is useful only for relating the times of nearby events.) | |
| 1144 | |
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1145 @item @var{click-count} |
| 6260 | 1146 This is the number of rapid repeated presses so far of the same mouse |
| 1147 button. @xref{Repeat Events}. | |
| 1148 @end table | |
| 1149 | |
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1150 The meanings of @var{buffer-pos}, @var{x} and @var{y} are somewhat |
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1151 different when the event location is in a special part of the screen, |
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1152 such as the mode line or a scroll bar. |
| 6260 | 1153 |
| 1154 If the location is in a scroll bar, then @var{buffer-pos} is the symbol | |
| 1155 @code{vertical-scroll-bar} or @code{horizontal-scroll-bar}, and the pair | |
| 1156 @code{(@var{x} . @var{y})} is replaced with a pair @code{(@var{portion} | |
| 1157 . @var{whole})}, where @var{portion} is the distance of the click from | |
| 1158 the top or left end of the scroll bar, and @var{whole} is the length of | |
| 1159 the entire scroll bar. | |
| 1160 | |
| 1161 If the position is on a mode line or the vertical line separating | |
| 1162 @var{window} from its neighbor to the right, then @var{buffer-pos} is | |
| 26288 | 1163 the symbol @code{mode-line}, @code{header-line}, or |
| 1164 @code{vertical-line}. For the mode line, @var{y} does not have | |
| 1165 meaningful data. For the vertical line, @var{x} does not have | |
| 1166 meaningful data. | |
| 6260 | 1167 |
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1168 In one special case, @var{buffer-pos} is a list containing a symbol (one |
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1169 of the symbols listed above) instead of just the symbol. This happens |
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1170 after the imaginary prefix keys for the event are inserted into the |
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1171 input stream. @xref{Key Sequence Input}. |
| 6260 | 1172 |
| 1173 @node Drag Events | |
| 1174 @subsection Drag Events | |
| 1175 @cindex drag event | |
| 1176 @cindex mouse drag event | |
| 1177 | |
| 1178 With Emacs, you can have a drag event without even changing your | |
| 1179 clothes. A @dfn{drag event} happens every time the user presses a mouse | |
| 1180 button and then moves the mouse to a different character position before | |
| 1181 releasing the button. Like all mouse events, drag events are | |
| 1182 represented in Lisp as lists. The lists record both the starting mouse | |
| 1183 position and the final position, like this: | |
| 1184 | |
| 1185 @example | |
| 1186 (@var{event-type} | |
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1187 (@var{window1} @var{buffer-pos1} (@var{x1} . @var{y1}) @var{timestamp1}) |
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1188 (@var{window2} @var{buffer-pos2} (@var{x2} . @var{y2}) @var{timestamp2}) |
| 6260 | 1189 @var{click-count}) |
| 1190 @end example | |
| 1191 | |
| 1192 For a drag event, the name of the symbol @var{event-type} contains the | |
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1193 prefix @samp{drag-}. For example, dragging the mouse with button 2 held |
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1194 down generates a @code{drag-mouse-2} event. The second and third |
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1195 elements of the event give the starting and ending position of the drag. |
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1196 Aside from that, the data have the same meanings as in a click event |
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1197 (@pxref{Click Events}). You can access the second element of any mouse |
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1198 event in the same way, with no need to distinguish drag events from |
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1199 others. |
| 6260 | 1200 |
| 1201 The @samp{drag-} prefix follows the modifier key prefixes such as | |
| 1202 @samp{C-} and @samp{M-}. | |
| 1203 | |
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1204 If @code{read-key-sequence} receives a drag event that has no key |
| 6260 | 1205 binding, and the corresponding click event does have a binding, it |
| 1206 changes the drag event into a click event at the drag's starting | |
| 1207 position. This means that you don't have to distinguish between click | |
| 1208 and drag events unless you want to. | |
| 1209 | |
| 1210 @node Button-Down Events | |
| 1211 @subsection Button-Down Events | |
| 1212 @cindex button-down event | |
| 1213 | |
| 1214 Click and drag events happen when the user releases a mouse button. | |
| 1215 They cannot happen earlier, because there is no way to distinguish a | |
| 1216 click from a drag until the button is released. | |
| 1217 | |
| 1218 If you want to take action as soon as a button is pressed, you need to | |
| 1219 handle @dfn{button-down} events.@footnote{Button-down is the | |
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1220 conservative antithesis of drag.} These occur as soon as a button is |
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1221 pressed. They are represented by lists that look exactly like click |
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1222 events (@pxref{Click Events}), except that the @var{event-type} symbol |
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1223 name contains the prefix @samp{down-}. The @samp{down-} prefix follows |
| 6260 | 1224 modifier key prefixes such as @samp{C-} and @samp{M-}. |
| 1225 | |
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1226 The function @code{read-key-sequence} ignores any button-down events |
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1227 that don't have command bindings; therefore, the Emacs command loop |
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1228 ignores them too. This means that you need not worry about defining |
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1229 button-down events unless you want them to do something. The usual |
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1230 reason to define a button-down event is so that you can track mouse |
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1231 motion (by reading motion events) until the button is released. |
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1232 @xref{Motion Events}. |
| 6260 | 1233 |
| 1234 @node Repeat Events | |
| 1235 @subsection Repeat Events | |
| 1236 @cindex repeat events | |
| 1237 @cindex double-click events | |
| 1238 @cindex triple-click events | |
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1239 @cindex mouse events, repeated |
| 6260 | 1240 |
| 1241 If you press the same mouse button more than once in quick succession | |
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1242 without moving the mouse, Emacs generates special @dfn{repeat} mouse |
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1243 events for the second and subsequent presses. |
| 6260 | 1244 |
| 1245 The most common repeat events are @dfn{double-click} events. Emacs | |
| 1246 generates a double-click event when you click a button twice; the event | |
| 1247 happens when you release the button (as is normal for all click | |
| 1248 events). | |
| 1249 | |
| 1250 The event type of a double-click event contains the prefix | |
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1251 @samp{double-}. Thus, a double click on the second mouse button with |
| 6260 | 1252 @key{meta} held down comes to the Lisp program as |
| 1253 @code{M-double-mouse-2}. If a double-click event has no binding, the | |
| 1254 binding of the corresponding ordinary click event is used to execute | |
| 1255 it. Thus, you need not pay attention to the double click feature | |
| 1256 unless you really want to. | |
| 1257 | |
| 1258 When the user performs a double click, Emacs generates first an ordinary | |
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1259 click event, and then a double-click event. Therefore, you must design |
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1260 the command binding of the double click event to assume that the |
| 6260 | 1261 single-click command has already run. It must produce the desired |
| 1262 results of a double click, starting from the results of a single click. | |
| 1263 | |
|
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1264 This is convenient, if the meaning of a double click somehow ``builds |
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1265 on'' the meaning of a single click---which is recommended user interface |
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1266 design practice for double clicks. |
| 6260 | 1267 |
| 1268 If you click a button, then press it down again and start moving the | |
| 1269 mouse with the button held down, then you get a @dfn{double-drag} event | |
| 1270 when you ultimately release the button. Its event type contains | |
| 1271 @samp{double-drag} instead of just @samp{drag}. If a double-drag event | |
| 1272 has no binding, Emacs looks for an alternate binding as if the event | |
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1273 were an ordinary drag. |
| 6260 | 1274 |
| 1275 Before the double-click or double-drag event, Emacs generates a | |
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1276 @dfn{double-down} event when the user presses the button down for the |
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1277 second time. Its event type contains @samp{double-down} instead of just |
| 6260 | 1278 @samp{down}. If a double-down event has no binding, Emacs looks for an |
| 1279 alternate binding as if the event were an ordinary button-down event. | |
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1280 If it finds no binding that way either, the double-down event is |
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1281 ignored. |
| 6260 | 1282 |
| 1283 To summarize, when you click a button and then press it again right | |
|
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1284 away, Emacs generates a down event and a click event for the first |
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1285 click, a double-down event when you press the button again, and finally |
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1286 either a double-click or a double-drag event. |
| 6260 | 1287 |
| 1288 If you click a button twice and then press it again, all in quick | |
| 1289 succession, Emacs generates a @dfn{triple-down} event, followed by | |
| 1290 either a @dfn{triple-click} or a @dfn{triple-drag}. The event types of | |
| 1291 these events contain @samp{triple} instead of @samp{double}. If any | |
| 1292 triple event has no binding, Emacs uses the binding that it would use | |
| 1293 for the corresponding double event. | |
| 1294 | |
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1295 If you click a button three or more times and then press it again, the |
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1296 events for the presses beyond the third are all triple events. Emacs |
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1297 does not have separate event types for quadruple, quintuple, etc.@: |
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1298 events. However, you can look at the event list to find out precisely |
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1299 how many times the button was pressed. |
| 6260 | 1300 |
| 1301 @defun event-click-count event | |
| 1302 This function returns the number of consecutive button presses that led | |
| 1303 up to @var{event}. If @var{event} is a double-down, double-click or | |
| 1304 double-drag event, the value is 2. If @var{event} is a triple event, | |
| 1305 the value is 3 or greater. If @var{event} is an ordinary mouse event | |
| 1306 (not a repeat event), the value is 1. | |
| 1307 @end defun | |
| 1308 | |
|
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1309 @defvar double-click-fuzz |
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1310 To generate repeat events, successive mouse button presses must be at |
|
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1311 approximately the same screen position. The value of |
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1312 @code{double-click-fuzz} specifies the maximum number of pixels the |
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1313 mouse may be moved between two successive clicks to make a |
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1314 double-click. |
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1315 @end defvar |
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1316 |
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1317 @defvar double-click-time |
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1318 To generate repeat events, the number of milliseconds between |
|
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1319 successive button presses must be less than the value of |
| 6260 | 1320 @code{double-click-time}. Setting @code{double-click-time} to |
| 1321 @code{nil} disables multi-click detection entirely. Setting it to | |
| 1322 @code{t} removes the time limit; Emacs then detects multi-clicks by | |
| 1323 position only. | |
| 1324 @end defvar | |
| 1325 | |
| 1326 @node Motion Events | |
| 1327 @subsection Motion Events | |
| 1328 @cindex motion event | |
| 1329 @cindex mouse motion events | |
| 1330 | |
| 1331 Emacs sometimes generates @dfn{mouse motion} events to describe motion | |
| 1332 of the mouse without any button activity. Mouse motion events are | |
| 1333 represented by lists that look like this: | |
| 1334 | |
| 1335 @example | |
|
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1336 (mouse-movement (@var{window} @var{buffer-pos} (@var{x} . @var{y}) @var{timestamp})) |
| 6260 | 1337 @end example |
| 1338 | |
| 1339 The second element of the list describes the current position of the | |
| 1340 mouse, just as in a click event (@pxref{Click Events}). | |
| 1341 | |
| 1342 The special form @code{track-mouse} enables generation of motion events | |
| 1343 within its body. Outside of @code{track-mouse} forms, Emacs does not | |
| 1344 generate events for mere motion of the mouse, and these events do not | |
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1345 appear. @xref{Mouse Tracking}. |
| 6260 | 1346 |
| 1347 @node Focus Events | |
| 1348 @subsection Focus Events | |
| 1349 @cindex focus event | |
| 1350 | |
| 1351 Window systems provide general ways for the user to control which window | |
| 1352 gets keyboard input. This choice of window is called the @dfn{focus}. | |
| 1353 When the user does something to switch between Emacs frames, that | |
| 1354 generates a @dfn{focus event}. The normal definition of a focus event, | |
| 1355 in the global keymap, is to select a new frame within Emacs, as the user | |
| 1356 would expect. @xref{Input Focus}. | |
| 1357 | |
| 1358 Focus events are represented in Lisp as lists that look like this: | |
| 1359 | |
| 1360 @example | |
| 1361 (switch-frame @var{new-frame}) | |
| 1362 @end example | |
| 1363 | |
| 1364 @noindent | |
| 1365 where @var{new-frame} is the frame switched to. | |
| 1366 | |
|
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1367 Most X window managers are set up so that just moving the mouse into a |
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1368 window is enough to set the focus there. Emacs appears to do this, |
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1369 because it changes the cursor to solid in the new frame. However, there |
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1370 is no need for the Lisp program to know about the focus change until |
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1371 some other kind of input arrives. So Emacs generates a focus event only |
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1372 when the user actually types a keyboard key or presses a mouse button in |
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1373 the new frame; just moving the mouse between frames does not generate a |
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1374 focus event. |
| 6260 | 1375 |
| 1376 A focus event in the middle of a key sequence would garble the | |
| 1377 sequence. So Emacs never generates a focus event in the middle of a key | |
| 1378 sequence. If the user changes focus in the middle of a key | |
| 1379 sequence---that is, after a prefix key---then Emacs reorders the events | |
| 1380 so that the focus event comes either before or after the multi-event key | |
| 1381 sequence, and not within it. | |
| 1382 | |
| 12067 | 1383 @node Misc Events |
| 1384 @subsection Miscellaneous Window System Events | |
| 1385 | |
| 1386 A few other event types represent occurrences within the window system. | |
| 1387 | |
| 1388 @table @code | |
| 1389 @cindex @code{delete-frame} event | |
| 1390 @item (delete-frame (@var{frame})) | |
| 1391 This kind of event indicates that the user gave the window manager | |
| 1392 a command to delete a particular window, which happens to be an Emacs frame. | |
| 1393 | |
| 1394 The standard definition of the @code{delete-frame} event is to delete @var{frame}. | |
| 1395 | |
| 1396 @cindex @code{iconify-frame} event | |
| 1397 @item (iconify-frame (@var{frame})) | |
| 1398 This kind of event indicates that the user iconified @var{frame} using | |
| 13007 | 1399 the window manager. Its standard definition is @code{ignore}; since the |
| 1400 frame has already been iconified, Emacs has no work to do. The purpose | |
| 1401 of this event type is so that you can keep track of such events if you | |
| 1402 want to. | |
| 12067 | 1403 |
|
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1404 @cindex @code{make-frame-visible} event |
|
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1405 @item (make-frame-visible (@var{frame})) |
| 12067 | 1406 This kind of event indicates that the user deiconified @var{frame} using |
| 1407 the window manager. Its standard definition is @code{ignore}; since the | |
| 13007 | 1408 frame has already been made visible, Emacs has no work to do. |
|
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1409 |
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1410 @cindex @code{mouse-wheel} event |
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1411 @item (mouse-wheel @var{position} @var{delta}) |
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1412 This kind of event is generated by moving a wheel on a mouse (such as |
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1413 the MS Intellimouse). Its effect is typically a kind of scroll or zoom. |
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1414 |
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1415 The element @var{delta} describes the amount and direction of the wheel |
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1416 rotation. Its absolute value is the number of increments by which the |
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1417 wheel was rotated. A negative @var{delta} indicates that the wheel was |
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1418 rotated backwards, towards the user, and a positive @var{delta} |
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1419 indicates that the wheel was rotated forward, away from the user. |
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1420 |
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1421 The element @var{position} is a list describing the position of the |
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1422 event, in the same format as used in a mouse-click event. |
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1423 |
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1424 This kind of event is generated only on some kinds of systems. |
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1425 |
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1426 @cindex @code{drag-n-drop} event |
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1427 @item (drag-n-drop @var{position} @var{files}) |
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1428 This kind of event is generated when a group of files is |
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1429 selected in an application outside of Emacs, and then dragged and |
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1430 dropped onto an Emacs frame. |
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1431 |
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1432 The element @var{position} is a list describing the position of the |
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1433 event, in the same format as used in a mouse-click event, and |
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1434 @var{files} is the list of file names that were dragged and dropped. |
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1435 The usual way to handle this event is by visiting these files. |
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1436 |
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1437 This kind of event is generated, at present, only on some kinds of |
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1438 systems. |
| 12067 | 1439 @end table |
| 1440 | |
| 12098 | 1441 If one of these events arrives in the middle of a key sequence---that |
| 1442 is, after a prefix key---then Emacs reorders the events so that this | |
| 1443 event comes either before or after the multi-event key sequence, not | |
| 1444 within it. | |
| 1445 | |
| 6260 | 1446 @node Event Examples |
| 1447 @subsection Event Examples | |
| 1448 | |
| 1449 If the user presses and releases the left mouse button over the same | |
| 1450 location, that generates a sequence of events like this: | |
| 1451 | |
| 1452 @smallexample | |
| 1453 (down-mouse-1 (#<window 18 on NEWS> 2613 (0 . 38) -864320)) | |
| 1454 (mouse-1 (#<window 18 on NEWS> 2613 (0 . 38) -864180)) | |
| 1455 @end smallexample | |
| 1456 | |
|
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1457 While holding the control key down, the user might hold down the |
| 6260 | 1458 second mouse button, and drag the mouse from one line to the next. |
| 1459 That produces two events, as shown here: | |
| 1460 | |
| 1461 @smallexample | |
| 1462 (C-down-mouse-2 (#<window 18 on NEWS> 3440 (0 . 27) -731219)) | |
| 1463 (C-drag-mouse-2 (#<window 18 on NEWS> 3440 (0 . 27) -731219) | |
| 1464 (#<window 18 on NEWS> 3510 (0 . 28) -729648)) | |
| 1465 @end smallexample | |
| 1466 | |
|
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1467 While holding down the meta and shift keys, the user might press the |
| 6260 | 1468 second mouse button on the window's mode line, and then drag the mouse |
|
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1469 into another window. That produces a pair of events like these: |
| 6260 | 1470 |
| 1471 @smallexample | |
| 1472 (M-S-down-mouse-2 (#<window 18 on NEWS> mode-line (33 . 31) -457844)) | |
| 1473 (M-S-drag-mouse-2 (#<window 18 on NEWS> mode-line (33 . 31) -457844) | |
| 1474 (#<window 20 on carlton-sanskrit.tex> 161 (33 . 3) | |
| 1475 -453816)) | |
| 1476 @end smallexample | |
| 1477 | |
| 1478 @node Classifying Events | |
| 1479 @subsection Classifying Events | |
| 1480 @cindex event type | |
| 1481 | |
|
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1482 Every event has an @dfn{event type}, which classifies the event for |
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1483 key binding purposes. For a keyboard event, the event type equals the |
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1484 event value; thus, the event type for a character is the character, and |
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1485 the event type for a function key symbol is the symbol itself. For |
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1486 events that are lists, the event type is the symbol in the @sc{car} of |
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1487 the list. Thus, the event type is always a symbol or a character. |
| 6260 | 1488 |
| 1489 Two events of the same type are equivalent where key bindings are | |
| 1490 concerned; thus, they always run the same command. That does not | |
| 1491 necessarily mean they do the same things, however, as some commands look | |
| 1492 at the whole event to decide what to do. For example, some commands use | |
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1493 the location of a mouse event to decide where in the buffer to act. |
| 6260 | 1494 |
| 1495 Sometimes broader classifications of events are useful. For example, | |
| 1496 you might want to ask whether an event involved the @key{META} key, | |
| 1497 regardless of which other key or mouse button was used. | |
| 1498 | |
| 1499 The functions @code{event-modifiers} and @code{event-basic-type} are | |
| 1500 provided to get such information conveniently. | |
| 1501 | |
| 1502 @defun event-modifiers event | |
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1503 This function returns a list of the modifiers that @var{event} has. The |
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1504 modifiers are symbols; they include @code{shift}, @code{control}, |
| 6260 | 1505 @code{meta}, @code{alt}, @code{hyper} and @code{super}. In addition, |
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1506 the modifiers list of a mouse event symbol always contains one of |
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1507 @code{click}, @code{drag}, and @code{down}. |
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1508 |
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1509 The argument @var{event} may be an entire event object, or just an event |
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1510 type. |
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1511 |
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1512 Here are some examples: |
| 6260 | 1513 |
| 1514 @example | |
| 1515 (event-modifiers ?a) | |
| 1516 @result{} nil | |
| 1517 (event-modifiers ?\C-a) | |
| 1518 @result{} (control) | |
| 1519 (event-modifiers ?\C-%) | |
| 1520 @result{} (control) | |
| 1521 (event-modifiers ?\C-\S-a) | |
| 1522 @result{} (control shift) | |
| 1523 (event-modifiers 'f5) | |
| 1524 @result{} nil | |
| 1525 (event-modifiers 's-f5) | |
| 1526 @result{} (super) | |
| 1527 (event-modifiers 'M-S-f5) | |
| 1528 @result{} (meta shift) | |
| 1529 (event-modifiers 'mouse-1) | |
| 1530 @result{} (click) | |
| 1531 (event-modifiers 'down-mouse-1) | |
| 1532 @result{} (down) | |
| 1533 @end example | |
| 1534 | |
| 1535 The modifiers list for a click event explicitly contains @code{click}, | |
| 1536 but the event symbol name itself does not contain @samp{click}. | |
| 1537 @end defun | |
| 1538 | |
| 1539 @defun event-basic-type event | |
| 1540 This function returns the key or mouse button that @var{event} | |
| 1541 describes, with all modifiers removed. For example: | |
| 1542 | |
| 1543 @example | |
| 1544 (event-basic-type ?a) | |
| 1545 @result{} 97 | |
| 1546 (event-basic-type ?A) | |
| 1547 @result{} 97 | |
| 1548 (event-basic-type ?\C-a) | |
| 1549 @result{} 97 | |
| 1550 (event-basic-type ?\C-\S-a) | |
| 1551 @result{} 97 | |
| 1552 (event-basic-type 'f5) | |
| 1553 @result{} f5 | |
| 1554 (event-basic-type 's-f5) | |
| 1555 @result{} f5 | |
| 1556 (event-basic-type 'M-S-f5) | |
| 1557 @result{} f5 | |
| 1558 (event-basic-type 'down-mouse-1) | |
| 1559 @result{} mouse-1 | |
| 1560 @end example | |
| 1561 @end defun | |
| 1562 | |
| 1563 @defun mouse-movement-p object | |
| 1564 This function returns non-@code{nil} if @var{object} is a mouse movement | |
| 1565 event. | |
| 1566 @end defun | |
| 1567 | |
| 12098 | 1568 @defun event-convert-list list |
| 1569 This function converts a list of modifier names and a basic event type | |
| 1570 to an event type which specifies all of them. For example, | |
| 1571 | |
| 1572 @example | |
| 1573 (event-convert-list '(control ?a)) | |
| 1574 @result{} 1 | |
| 1575 (event-convert-list '(control meta ?a)) | |
| 1576 @result{} -134217727 | |
| 1577 (event-convert-list '(control super f1)) | |
| 1578 @result{} C-s-f1 | |
| 1579 @end example | |
| 1580 @end defun | |
| 1581 | |
| 6260 | 1582 @node Accessing Events |
| 1583 @subsection Accessing Events | |
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1584 @cindex mouse events, accessing the data |
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1585 @cindex accessing data of mouse events |
| 6260 | 1586 |
| 1587 This section describes convenient functions for accessing the data in | |
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1588 a mouse button or motion event. |
| 6260 | 1589 |
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1590 These two functions return the starting or ending position of a |
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1591 mouse-button event, as a list of this form: |
| 6260 | 1592 |
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1593 @example |
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1594 (@var{window} @var{buffer-position} (@var{x} . @var{y}) @var{timestamp}) |
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1595 @end example |
| 6260 | 1596 |
| 1597 @defun event-start event | |
| 1598 This returns the starting position of @var{event}. | |
| 1599 | |
| 1600 If @var{event} is a click or button-down event, this returns the | |
| 1601 location of the event. If @var{event} is a drag event, this returns the | |
| 1602 drag's starting position. | |
| 1603 @end defun | |
| 1604 | |
| 1605 @defun event-end event | |
| 1606 This returns the ending position of @var{event}. | |
| 1607 | |
| 1608 If @var{event} is a drag event, this returns the position where the user | |
| 1609 released the mouse button. If @var{event} is a click or button-down | |
| 1610 event, the value is actually the starting position, which is the only | |
| 1611 position such events have. | |
| 1612 @end defun | |
| 1613 | |
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1614 @cindex mouse position list, accessing |
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1615 These five functions take a position list as described above, and |
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1616 return various parts of it. |
| 6260 | 1617 |
| 1618 @defun posn-window position | |
| 1619 Return the window that @var{position} is in. | |
| 1620 @end defun | |
| 1621 | |
| 1622 @defun posn-point position | |
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1623 Return the buffer position in @var{position}. This is an integer. |
| 6260 | 1624 @end defun |
| 1625 | |
| 1626 @defun posn-x-y position | |
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1627 Return the pixel-based x and y coordinates in @var{position}, as a cons |
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1628 cell @code{(@var{x} . @var{y})}. |
| 6260 | 1629 @end defun |
| 1630 | |
| 1631 @defun posn-col-row position | |
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1632 Return the row and column (in units of characters) of @var{position}, as |
| 6260 | 1633 a cons cell @code{(@var{col} . @var{row})}. These are computed from the |
| 1634 @var{x} and @var{y} values actually found in @var{position}. | |
| 1635 @end defun | |
| 1636 | |
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1637 @cindex mouse event, timestamp |
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1638 @cindex timestamp of a mouse event |
| 6260 | 1639 @defun posn-timestamp position |
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1640 Return the timestamp in @var{position}. |
| 6260 | 1641 @end defun |
| 1642 | |
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1643 These functions are useful for decoding scroll bar events. |
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1644 |
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1645 @defun scroll-bar-event-ratio event |
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1646 This function returns the fractional vertical position of a scroll bar |
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1647 event within the scroll bar. The value is a cons cell |
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1648 @code{(@var{portion} . @var{whole})} containing two integers whose ratio |
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1649 is the fractional position. |
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1650 @end defun |
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1651 |
| 6260 | 1652 @defun scroll-bar-scale ratio total |
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1653 This function multiplies (in effect) @var{ratio} by @var{total}, |
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1654 rounding the result to an integer. The argument @var{ratio} is not a |
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1655 number, but rather a pair @code{(@var{num} . @var{denom})}---typically a |
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1656 value returned by @code{scroll-bar-event-ratio}. |
| 6260 | 1657 |
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1658 This function is handy for scaling a position on a scroll bar into a |
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1659 buffer position. Here's how to do that: |
| 6260 | 1660 |
| 1661 @example | |
| 1662 (+ (point-min) | |
| 1663 (scroll-bar-scale | |
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1664 (posn-x-y (event-start event)) |
| 6260 | 1665 (- (point-max) (point-min)))) |
| 1666 @end example | |
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1667 |
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1668 Recall that scroll bar events have two integers forming a ratio, in place |
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1669 of a pair of x and y coordinates. |
| 6260 | 1670 @end defun |
| 1671 | |
| 1672 @node Strings of Events | |
| 1673 @subsection Putting Keyboard Events in Strings | |
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1674 @cindex keyboard events in strings |
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1675 @cindex strings with keyboard events |
| 6260 | 1676 |
| 1677 In most of the places where strings are used, we conceptualize the | |
| 1678 string as containing text characters---the same kind of characters found | |
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1679 in buffers or files. Occasionally Lisp programs use strings that |
| 6260 | 1680 conceptually contain keyboard characters; for example, they may be key |
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1681 sequences or keyboard macro definitions. However, storing keyboard |
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1682 characters in a string is a complex matter, for reasons of historical |
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1683 compatibility, and it is not always possible. |
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1684 |
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1685 We recommend that new programs avoid dealing with these complexities |
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1686 by not storing keyboard events in strings. Here is how to do that: |
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1687 |
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1688 @itemize @bullet |
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1689 @item |
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1690 Use vectors instead of strings for key sequences, when you plan to use |
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1691 them for anything other than as arguments to @code{lookup-key} and |
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1692 @code{define-key}. For example, you can use |
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1693 @code{read-key-sequence-vector} instead of @code{read-key-sequence}, and |
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1694 @code{this-command-keys-vector} instead of @code{this-command-keys}. |
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1695 |
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1696 @item |
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1697 Use vectors to write key sequence constants containing meta characters, |
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1698 even when passing them directly to @code{define-key}. |
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1699 |
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1700 @item |
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1701 When you have to look at the contents of a key sequence that might be a |
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1702 string, use @code{listify-key-sequence} (@pxref{Event Input Misc}) |
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1703 first, to convert it to a list. |
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1704 @end itemize |
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1705 |
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1706 The complexities stem from the modifier bits that keyboard input |
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1707 characters can include. Aside from the Meta modifier, none of these |
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1708 modifier bits can be included in a string, and the Meta modifier is |
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1709 allowed only in special cases. |
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1710 |
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1711 The earliest GNU Emacs versions represented meta characters as codes |
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1712 in the range of 128 to 255. At that time, the basic character codes |
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1713 ranged from 0 to 127, so all keyboard character codes did fit in a |
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1714 string. Many Lisp programs used @samp{\M-} in string constants to stand |
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1715 for meta characters, especially in arguments to @code{define-key} and |
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1716 similar functions, and key sequences and sequences of events were always |
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1717 represented as strings. |
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1718 |
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1719 When we added support for larger basic character codes beyond 127, and |
|
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1720 additional modifier bits, we had to change the representation of meta |
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1721 characters. Now the flag that represents the Meta modifier in a |
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1722 character is |
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1723 @tex |
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1724 @math{2^{27}} |
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1725 @end tex |
| 27193 | 1726 @ifnottex |
| 12098 | 1727 2**27 |
| 27193 | 1728 @end ifnottex |
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1729 and such numbers cannot be included in a string. |
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1730 |
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1731 To support programs with @samp{\M-} in string constants, there are |
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1732 special rules for including certain meta characters in a string. |
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1733 Here are the rules for interpreting a string as a sequence of input |
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1734 characters: |
| 6260 | 1735 |
| 1736 @itemize @bullet | |
| 1737 @item | |
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1738 If the keyboard character value is in the range of 0 to 127, it can go |
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1739 in the string unchanged. |
| 6260 | 1740 |
| 1741 @item | |
| 12098 | 1742 The meta variants of those characters, with codes in the range of |
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1743 @tex |
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1744 @math{2^{27}} |
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1745 @end tex |
| 27193 | 1746 @ifnottex |
| 12098 | 1747 2**27 |
| 27193 | 1748 @end ifnottex |
| 12098 | 1749 to |
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1750 @tex |
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1751 @math{2^{27} + 127}, |
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1752 @end tex |
| 27193 | 1753 @ifnottex |
| 12098 | 1754 2**27+127, |
| 27193 | 1755 @end ifnottex |
| 12098 | 1756 can also go in the string, but you must change their |
| 1757 numeric values. You must set the | |
|
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1758 @tex |
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1759 @math{2^{7}} |
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1760 @end tex |
| 27193 | 1761 @ifnottex |
| 12098 | 1762 2**7 |
| 27193 | 1763 @end ifnottex |
| 12098 | 1764 bit instead of the |
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1765 @tex |
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1766 @math{2^{27}} |
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1767 @end tex |
| 27193 | 1768 @ifnottex |
| 12098 | 1769 2**27 |
| 27193 | 1770 @end ifnottex |
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1771 bit, resulting in a value between 128 and 255. Only a unibyte string |
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1772 can include these codes. |
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1773 |
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1774 @item |
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1775 Non-@sc{ascii} characters above 256 can be included in a multibyte string. |
| 6260 | 1776 |
| 1777 @item | |
| 1778 Other keyboard character events cannot fit in a string. This includes | |
| 1779 keyboard events in the range of 128 to 255. | |
| 1780 @end itemize | |
| 1781 | |
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1782 Functions such as @code{read-key-sequence} that construct strings of |
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1783 keyboard input characters follow these rules: they construct vectors |
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1784 instead of strings, when the events won't fit in a string. |
| 6260 | 1785 |
| 1786 When you use the read syntax @samp{\M-} in a string, it produces a | |
| 1787 code in the range of 128 to 255---the same code that you get if you | |
| 1788 modify the corresponding keyboard event to put it in the string. Thus, | |
| 1789 meta events in strings work consistently regardless of how they get into | |
| 1790 the strings. | |
| 1791 | |
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1792 However, most programs would do well to avoid these issues by |
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1793 following the recommendations at the beginning of this section. |
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1794 |
| 6260 | 1795 @node Reading Input |
| 1796 @section Reading Input | |
| 1797 | |
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1798 The editor command loop reads key sequences using the function |
| 6260 | 1799 @code{read-key-sequence}, which uses @code{read-event}. These and other |
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1800 functions for event input are also available for use in Lisp programs. |
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1801 See also @code{momentary-string-display} in @ref{Temporary Displays}, |
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1802 and @code{sit-for} in @ref{Waiting}. @xref{Terminal Input}, for |
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1803 functions and variables for controlling terminal input modes and |
| 15764 | 1804 debugging terminal input. @xref{Translating Input}, for features you |
| 1805 can use for translating or modifying input events while reading them. | |
| 6260 | 1806 |
| 1807 For higher-level input facilities, see @ref{Minibuffers}. | |
| 1808 | |
| 1809 @menu | |
| 1810 * Key Sequence Input:: How to read one key sequence. | |
| 1811 * Reading One Event:: How to read just one event. | |
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1812 * Invoking the Input Method:: How reading an event uses the input method. |
| 6260 | 1813 * Quoted Character Input:: Asking the user to specify a character. |
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1814 * Event Input Misc:: How to reread or throw away input events. |
| 6260 | 1815 @end menu |
| 1816 | |
| 1817 @node Key Sequence Input | |
| 1818 @subsection Key Sequence Input | |
| 1819 @cindex key sequence input | |
| 1820 | |
| 1821 The command loop reads input a key sequence at a time, by calling | |
| 1822 @code{read-key-sequence}. Lisp programs can also call this function; | |
| 1823 for example, @code{describe-key} uses it to read the key to describe. | |
| 1824 | |
| 1825 @defun read-key-sequence prompt | |
| 1826 @cindex key sequence | |
| 1827 This function reads a key sequence and returns it as a string or | |
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1828 vector. It keeps reading events until it has accumulated a complete key |
| 6260 | 1829 sequence; that is, enough to specify a non-prefix command using the |
| 1830 currently active keymaps. | |
| 1831 | |
| 1832 If the events are all characters and all can fit in a string, then | |
| 1833 @code{read-key-sequence} returns a string (@pxref{Strings of Events}). | |
| 1834 Otherwise, it returns a vector, since a vector can hold all kinds of | |
| 1835 events---characters, symbols, and lists. The elements of the string or | |
| 1836 vector are the events in the key sequence. | |
| 1837 | |
| 1838 The argument @var{prompt} is either a string to be displayed in the echo | |
| 1839 area as a prompt, or @code{nil}, meaning not to display a prompt. | |
| 1840 | |
| 1841 In the example below, the prompt @samp{?} is displayed in the echo area, | |
| 1842 and the user types @kbd{C-x C-f}. | |
| 1843 | |
| 1844 @example | |
| 1845 (read-key-sequence "?") | |
| 1846 | |
| 1847 @group | |
| 1848 ---------- Echo Area ---------- | |
| 1849 ?@kbd{C-x C-f} | |
| 1850 ---------- Echo Area ---------- | |
| 1851 | |
| 1852 @result{} "^X^F" | |
| 1853 @end group | |
| 1854 @end example | |
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1855 |
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1856 The function @code{read-key-sequence} suppresses quitting: @kbd{C-g} |
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1857 typed while reading with this function works like any other character, |
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1858 and does not set @code{quit-flag}. @xref{Quitting}. |
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1859 @end defun |
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1860 |
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1861 @defun read-key-sequence-vector prompt |
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1862 This is like @code{read-key-sequence} except that it always |
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1863 returns the key sequence as a vector, never as a string. |
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1864 @xref{Strings of Events}. |
| 6260 | 1865 @end defun |
| 1866 | |
| 1867 @cindex upper case key sequence | |
| 1868 @cindex downcasing in @code{lookup-key} | |
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1869 If an input character is an upper-case letter and has no key binding, |
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1870 but its lower-case equivalent has one, then @code{read-key-sequence} |
| 6260 | 1871 converts the character to lower case. Note that @code{lookup-key} does |
| 1872 not perform case conversion in this way. | |
| 1873 | |
| 1874 The function @code{read-key-sequence} also transforms some mouse events. | |
| 1875 It converts unbound drag events into click events, and discards unbound | |
| 12098 | 1876 button-down events entirely. It also reshuffles focus events and |
| 1877 miscellaneous window events so that they never appear in a key sequence | |
| 1878 with any other events. | |
| 6260 | 1879 |
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1880 @cindex @code{header-line} prefix key |
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1881 @cindex @code{mode-line} prefix key |
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1882 @cindex @code{vertical-line} prefix key |
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1883 @cindex @code{horizontal-scroll-bar} prefix key |
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1884 @cindex @code{vertical-scroll-bar} prefix key |
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1885 @cindex @code{menu-bar} prefix key |
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1886 @cindex mouse events, in special parts of frame |
| 6260 | 1887 When mouse events occur in special parts of a window, such as a mode |
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1888 line or a scroll bar, the event type shows nothing special---it is the |
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1889 same symbol that would normally represent that combination of mouse |
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1890 button and modifier keys. The information about the window part is kept |
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1891 elsewhere in the event---in the coordinates. But |
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1892 @code{read-key-sequence} translates this information into imaginary |
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1893 ``prefix keys'', all of which are symbols: @code{header-line}, |
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1894 @code{horizontal-scroll-bar}, @code{menu-bar}, @code{mode-line}, |
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1895 @code{vertical-line}, and @code{vertical-scroll-bar}. You can define |
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1896 meanings for mouse clicks in special window parts by defining key |
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1897 sequences using these imaginary prefix keys. |
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1898 |
| 6260 | 1899 For example, if you call @code{read-key-sequence} and then click the |
| 12098 | 1900 mouse on the window's mode line, you get two events, like this: |
| 6260 | 1901 |
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1902 @example |
| 6260 | 1903 (read-key-sequence "Click on the mode line: ") |
| 1904 @result{} [mode-line | |
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1905 (mouse-1 |
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1906 (#<window 6 on NEWS> mode-line |
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1907 (40 . 63) 5959987))] |
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1908 @end example |
| 6260 | 1909 |
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1910 @defvar num-input-keys |
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1911 @c Emacs 19 feature |
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1912 This variable's value is the number of key sequences processed so far in |
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1913 this Emacs session. This includes key sequences read from the terminal |
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1914 and key sequences read from keyboard macros being executed. |
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1915 @end defvar |
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1916 |
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1917 @defvar num-nonmacro-input-events |
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1918 This variable holds the total number of input events received so far |
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1919 from the terminal---not counting those generated by keyboard macros. |
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1920 @end defvar |
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1921 |
| 6260 | 1922 @node Reading One Event |
| 1923 @subsection Reading One Event | |
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1924 @cindex reading a single event |
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1925 @cindex event, reading only one |
| 6260 | 1926 |
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1927 The lowest level functions for command input are those that read a |
| 6260 | 1928 single event. |
| 1929 | |
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1930 @defun read-event &optional prompt inherit-input-method |
| 6260 | 1931 This function reads and returns the next event of command input, waiting |
| 1932 if necessary until an event is available. Events can come directly from | |
| 1933 the user or from a keyboard macro. | |
| 1934 | |
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1935 If the optional argument @var{prompt} is non-@code{nil}, it should be a |
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1936 string to display in the echo area as a prompt. Otherwise, |
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1937 @code{read-event} does not display any message to indicate it is waiting |
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1938 for input; instead, it prompts by echoing: it displays descriptions of |
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1939 the events that led to or were read by the current command. @xref{The |
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1940 Echo Area}. |
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1941 |
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1942 If @var{inherit-input-method} is non-@code{nil}, then the current input |
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1943 method (if any) is employed to make it possible to enter a |
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1944 non-@sc{ascii} character. Otherwise, input method handling is disabled |
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1945 for reading this event. |
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1946 |
| 6260 | 1947 If @code{cursor-in-echo-area} is non-@code{nil}, then @code{read-event} |
| 1948 moves the cursor temporarily to the echo area, to the end of any message | |
| 1949 displayed there. Otherwise @code{read-event} does not move the cursor. | |
| 1950 | |
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1951 If @code{read-event} gets an event that is defined as a help character, in |
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1952 some cases @code{read-event} processes the event directly without |
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1953 returning. @xref{Help Functions}. Certain other events, called |
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1954 @dfn{special events}, are also processed directly within |
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1955 @code{read-event} (@pxref{Special Events}). |
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1956 |
| 6260 | 1957 Here is what happens if you call @code{read-event} and then press the |
| 1958 right-arrow function key: | |
| 1959 | |
| 1960 @example | |
| 1961 @group | |
| 1962 (read-event) | |
| 1963 @result{} right | |
| 1964 @end group | |
| 1965 @end example | |
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1966 @end defun |
| 6260 | 1967 |
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1968 @defun read-char &optional prompt inherit-input-method |
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1969 This function reads and returns a character of command input. If the |
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1970 user generates an event which is not a character (i.e. a mouse click or |
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1971 function key event), @code{read-char} signals an error. The arguments |
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1972 work as in @code{read-event}. |
| 6260 | 1973 |
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1974 In the first example, the user types the character @kbd{1} (@sc{ascii} |
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1975 code 49). The second example shows a keyboard macro definition that |
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1976 calls @code{read-char} from the minibuffer using @code{eval-expression}. |
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1977 @code{read-char} reads the keyboard macro's very next character, which |
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1978 is @kbd{1}. Then @code{eval-expression} displays its return value in |
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1979 the echo area. |
| 6260 | 1980 |
| 1981 @example | |
| 1982 @group | |
| 1983 (read-char) | |
| 1984 @result{} 49 | |
| 1985 @end group | |
| 1986 | |
| 1987 @group | |
| 12098 | 1988 ;; @r{We assume here you use @kbd{M-:} to evaluate this.} |
| 6260 | 1989 (symbol-function 'foo) |
| 12098 | 1990 @result{} "^[:(read-char)^M1" |
| 6260 | 1991 @end group |
| 1992 @group | |
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1993 (execute-kbd-macro 'foo) |
| 6260 | 1994 @print{} 49 |
| 1995 @result{} nil | |
| 1996 @end group | |
| 1997 @end example | |
| 1998 @end defun | |
| 1999 | |
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2000 @defun read-char-exclusive &optional prompt inherit-input-method |
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2001 This function reads and returns a character of command input. If the |
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2002 user generates an event which is not a character, |
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2003 @code{read-char-exclusive} ignores it and reads another event, until it |
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2004 gets a character. The arguments work as in @code{read-event}. |
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2005 @end defun |
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2006 |
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2007 @node Invoking the Input Method |
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2008 @subsection Invoking the Input Method |
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2009 |
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2010 The event-reading functions invoke the current input method, if any |
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2011 (@pxref{Input Methods}). If the value of @code{input-method-function} |
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2012 is non-@code{nil}, it should be a function; when @code{read-event} reads |
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2013 a printing character (including @key{SPC}) with no modifier bits, it |
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2014 calls that function, passing the character as an argument. |
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2015 |
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2016 @defvar input-method-function |
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2017 If this is non-@code{nil}, its value specifies the current input method |
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2018 function. |
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2019 |
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2020 @strong{Note:} Don't bind this variable with @code{let}. It is often |
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2021 buffer-local, and if you bind it around reading input (which is exactly |
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2022 when you @emph{would} bind it), switching buffers asynchronously while |
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2023 Emacs is waiting will cause the value to be restored in the wrong |
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2024 buffer. |
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2025 @end defvar |
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2026 |
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2027 The input method function should return a list of events which should |
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2028 be used as input. (If the list is @code{nil}, that means there is no |
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2029 input, so @code{read-event} waits for another event.) These events are |
|
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2030 processed before the events in @code{unread-command-events} |
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2031 (@pxref{Event Input Misc}). Events |
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2032 returned by the input method function are not passed to the input method |
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2033 function again, even if they are printing characters with no modifier |
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2034 bits. |
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2035 |
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2036 If the input method function calls @code{read-event} or |
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2037 @code{read-key-sequence}, it should bind @code{input-method-function} to |
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2038 @code{nil} first, to prevent recursion. |
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2039 |
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2040 The input method function is not called when reading the second and |
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2041 subsequent events of a key sequence. Thus, these characters are not |
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2042 subject to input method processing. The input method function should |
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2043 test the values of @code{overriding-local-map} and |
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2044 @code{overriding-terminal-local-map}; if either of these variables is |
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2045 non-@code{nil}, the input method should put its argument into a list and |
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2046 return that list with no further processing. |
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2047 |
| 6260 | 2048 @node Quoted Character Input |
| 2049 @subsection Quoted Character Input | |
| 2050 @cindex quoted character input | |
| 2051 | |
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2052 You can use the function @code{read-quoted-char} to ask the user to |
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2053 specify a character, and allow the user to specify a control or meta |
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2054 character conveniently, either literally or as an octal character code. |
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2055 The command @code{quoted-insert} uses this function. |
| 6260 | 2056 |
| 2057 @defun read-quoted-char &optional prompt | |
| 2058 @cindex octal character input | |
| 2059 @cindex control characters, reading | |
| 2060 @cindex nonprinting characters, reading | |
| 2061 This function is like @code{read-char}, except that if the first | |
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2062 character read is an octal digit (0-7), it reads any number of octal |
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2063 digits (but stopping if a non-octal digit is found), and returns the |
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2064 character represented by that numeric character code. |
| 6260 | 2065 |
| 2066 Quitting is suppressed when the first character is read, so that the | |
| 2067 user can enter a @kbd{C-g}. @xref{Quitting}. | |
| 2068 | |
| 2069 If @var{prompt} is supplied, it specifies a string for prompting the | |
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2070 user. The prompt string is always displayed in the echo area, followed |
| 6260 | 2071 by a single @samp{-}. |
| 2072 | |
| 2073 In the following example, the user types in the octal number 177 (which | |
| 2074 is 127 in decimal). | |
| 2075 | |
| 2076 @example | |
| 2077 (read-quoted-char "What character") | |
| 2078 | |
| 2079 @group | |
| 2080 ---------- Echo Area ---------- | |
| 2081 What character-@kbd{177} | |
| 2082 ---------- Echo Area ---------- | |
| 2083 | |
| 2084 @result{} 127 | |
| 2085 @end group | |
| 2086 @end example | |
| 2087 @end defun | |
| 2088 | |
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2089 @need 2000 |
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2090 @node Event Input Misc |
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2091 @subsection Miscellaneous Event Input Features |
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2092 |
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2093 This section describes how to ``peek ahead'' at events without using |
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2094 them up, how to check for pending input, and how to discard pending |
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2095 input. See also the function @code{read-passwd} (@pxref{Reading a |
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2096 Password}). |
| 6260 | 2097 |
| 2098 @defvar unread-command-events | |
| 2099 @cindex next input | |
| 2100 @cindex peeking at input | |
| 2101 This variable holds a list of events waiting to be read as command | |
|
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2102 input. The events are used in the order they appear in the list, and |
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2103 removed one by one as they are used. |
| 6260 | 2104 |
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2105 The variable is needed because in some cases a function reads an event |
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2106 and then decides not to use it. Storing the event in this variable |
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2107 causes it to be processed normally, by the command loop or by the |
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2108 functions to read command input. |
| 6260 | 2109 |
| 2110 @cindex prefix argument unreading | |
| 2111 For example, the function that implements numeric prefix arguments reads | |
| 2112 any number of digits. When it finds a non-digit event, it must unread | |
| 2113 the event so that it can be read normally by the command loop. | |
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2114 Likewise, incremental search uses this feature to unread events with no |
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2115 special meaning in a search, because these events should exit the search |
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2116 and then execute normally. |
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2117 |
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2118 The reliable and easy way to extract events from a key sequence so as to |
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2119 put them in @code{unread-command-events} is to use |
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2120 @code{listify-key-sequence} (@pxref{Strings of Events}). |
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2121 |
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2122 Normally you add events to the front of this list, so that the events |
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2123 most recently unread will be reread first. |
| 6260 | 2124 @end defvar |
| 2125 | |
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2126 @defun listify-key-sequence key |
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2127 This function converts the string or vector @var{key} to a list of |
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2128 individual events, which you can put in @code{unread-command-events}. |
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2129 @end defun |
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2130 |
| 6260 | 2131 @defvar unread-command-char |
| 2132 This variable holds a character to be read as command input. | |
| 2133 A value of -1 means ``empty''. | |
| 2134 | |
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2135 This variable is mostly obsolete now that you can use |
| 6260 | 2136 @code{unread-command-events} instead; it exists only to support programs |
| 2137 written for Emacs versions 18 and earlier. | |
| 2138 @end defvar | |
| 2139 | |
| 2140 @defun input-pending-p | |
| 2141 @cindex waiting for command key input | |
| 2142 This function determines whether any command input is currently | |
| 2143 available to be read. It returns immediately, with value @code{t} if | |
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2144 there is available input, @code{nil} otherwise. On rare occasions it |
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2145 may return @code{t} when no input is available. |
| 6260 | 2146 @end defun |
| 2147 | |
| 2148 @defvar last-input-event | |
|
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2149 @defvarx last-input-char |
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2150 This variable records the last terminal input event read, whether |
| 6260 | 2151 as part of a command or explicitly by a Lisp program. |
| 2152 | |
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2153 In the example below, the Lisp program reads the character @kbd{1}, |
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2154 @sc{ascii} code 49. It becomes the value of @code{last-input-event}, |
| 12098 | 2155 while @kbd{C-e} (we assume @kbd{C-x C-e} command is used to evaluate |
| 2156 this expression) remains the value of @code{last-command-event}. | |
| 6260 | 2157 |
| 2158 @example | |
| 2159 @group | |
| 2160 (progn (print (read-char)) | |
|
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2161 (print last-command-event) |
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2162 last-input-event) |
| 6260 | 2163 @print{} 49 |
| 2164 @print{} 5 | |
| 2165 @result{} 49 | |
| 2166 @end group | |
| 2167 @end example | |
| 2168 | |
| 2169 The alias @code{last-input-char} exists for compatibility with | |
| 2170 Emacs version 18. | |
| 2171 @end defvar | |
| 2172 | |
| 2173 @defun discard-input | |
| 2174 @cindex flush input | |
| 2175 @cindex discard input | |
| 2176 @cindex terminate keyboard macro | |
| 2177 This function discards the contents of the terminal input buffer and | |
| 2178 cancels any keyboard macro that might be in the process of definition. | |
| 2179 It returns @code{nil}. | |
| 2180 | |
| 2181 In the following example, the user may type a number of characters right | |
| 2182 after starting the evaluation of the form. After the @code{sleep-for} | |
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2183 finishes sleeping, @code{discard-input} discards any characters typed |
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2184 during the sleep. |
| 6260 | 2185 |
| 2186 @example | |
| 2187 (progn (sleep-for 2) | |
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2188 (discard-input)) |
| 6260 | 2189 @result{} nil |
| 2190 @end example | |
| 2191 @end defun | |
| 2192 | |
|
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2193 @node Special Events |
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2194 @section Special Events |
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2195 |
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2196 @cindex special events |
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2197 Special events are handled at a very low level---as soon as they are |
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2198 read. The @code{read-event} function processes these events itself, and |
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2199 never returns them. |
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2200 |
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2201 Events that are handled in this way do not echo, they are never grouped |
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2202 into key sequences, and they never appear in the value of |
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2203 @code{last-command-event} or @code{(this-command-keys)}. They do not |
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2204 discard a numeric argument, they cannot be unread with |
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2205 @code{unread-command-events}, they may not appear in a keyboard macro, |
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2206 and they are not recorded in a keyboard macro while you are defining |
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2207 one. |
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2208 |
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2209 These events do, however, appear in @code{last-input-event} immediately |
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2210 after they are read, and this is the way for the event's definition to |
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2211 find the actual event. |
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2212 |
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2213 The events types @code{iconify-frame}, @code{make-frame-visible} and |
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2214 @code{delete-frame} are normally handled in this way. The keymap which |
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2215 defines how to handle special events---and which events are special---is |
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2216 in the variable @code{special-event-map} (@pxref{Active Keymaps}). |
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2217 |
| 6260 | 2218 @node Waiting |
| 2219 @section Waiting for Elapsed Time or Input | |
| 2220 @cindex pausing | |
| 2221 @cindex waiting | |
| 2222 | |
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2223 The wait functions are designed to wait for a certain amount of time |
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2224 to pass or until there is input. For example, you may wish to pause in |
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2225 the middle of a computation to allow the user time to view the display. |
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2226 @code{sit-for} pauses and updates the screen, and returns immediately if |
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2227 input comes in, while @code{sleep-for} pauses without updating the |
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2228 screen. |
| 6260 | 2229 |
| 2230 @defun sit-for seconds &optional millisec nodisp | |
| 2231 This function performs redisplay (provided there is no pending input | |
| 2232 from the user), then waits @var{seconds} seconds, or until input is | |
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2233 available. The value is @code{t} if @code{sit-for} waited the full |
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2234 time with no input arriving (see @code{input-pending-p} in @ref{Event |
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2235 Input Misc}). Otherwise, the value is @code{nil}. |
| 6260 | 2236 |
| 12098 | 2237 The argument @var{seconds} need not be an integer. If it is a floating |
| 2238 point number, @code{sit-for} waits for a fractional number of seconds. | |
| 2239 Some systems support only a whole number of seconds; on these systems, | |
| 2240 @var{seconds} is rounded down. | |
| 2241 | |
| 6260 | 2242 The optional argument @var{millisec} specifies an additional waiting |
| 2243 period measured in milliseconds. This adds to the period specified by | |
| 12098 | 2244 @var{seconds}. If the system doesn't support waiting fractions of a |
| 2245 second, you get an error if you specify nonzero @var{millisec}. | |
| 6260 | 2246 |
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2247 The expression @code{(sit-for 0)} is a convenient way to request a |
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2248 redisplay, without any delay. @xref{Forcing Redisplay}. |
| 6260 | 2249 |
| 2250 If @var{nodisp} is non-@code{nil}, then @code{sit-for} does not | |
| 2251 redisplay, but it still returns as soon as input is available (or when | |
| 2252 the timeout elapses). | |
| 2253 | |
| 12067 | 2254 Iconifying or deiconifying a frame makes @code{sit-for} return, because |
| 2255 that generates an event. @xref{Misc Events}. | |
| 2256 | |
| 6260 | 2257 The usual purpose of @code{sit-for} is to give the user time to read |
| 2258 text that you display. | |
| 2259 @end defun | |
| 2260 | |
| 2261 @defun sleep-for seconds &optional millisec | |
| 2262 This function simply pauses for @var{seconds} seconds without updating | |
| 2263 the display. It pays no attention to available input. It returns | |
| 2264 @code{nil}. | |
| 2265 | |
| 12098 | 2266 The argument @var{seconds} need not be an integer. If it is a floating |
| 2267 point number, @code{sleep-for} waits for a fractional number of seconds. | |
| 2268 Some systems support only a whole number of seconds; on these systems, | |
| 2269 @var{seconds} is rounded down. | |
| 2270 | |
| 6260 | 2271 The optional argument @var{millisec} specifies an additional waiting |
| 2272 period measured in milliseconds. This adds to the period specified by | |
| 12098 | 2273 @var{seconds}. If the system doesn't support waiting fractions of a |
| 2274 second, you get an error if you specify nonzero @var{millisec}. | |
| 6260 | 2275 |
| 2276 Use @code{sleep-for} when you wish to guarantee a delay. | |
| 2277 @end defun | |
| 2278 | |
| 2279 @xref{Time of Day}, for functions to get the current time. | |
| 2280 | |
| 2281 @node Quitting | |
| 2282 @section Quitting | |
| 2283 @cindex @kbd{C-g} | |
| 2284 @cindex quitting | |
| 2285 | |
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2286 Typing @kbd{C-g} while a Lisp function is running causes Emacs to |
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2287 @dfn{quit} whatever it is doing. This means that control returns to the |
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2288 innermost active command loop. |
| 6260 | 2289 |
| 2290 Typing @kbd{C-g} while the command loop is waiting for keyboard input | |
| 2291 does not cause a quit; it acts as an ordinary input character. In the | |
| 2292 simplest case, you cannot tell the difference, because @kbd{C-g} | |
| 2293 normally runs the command @code{keyboard-quit}, whose effect is to quit. | |
|
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2294 However, when @kbd{C-g} follows a prefix key, they combine to form an |
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2295 undefined key. The effect is to cancel the prefix key as well as any |
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2296 prefix argument. |
| 6260 | 2297 |
| 2298 In the minibuffer, @kbd{C-g} has a different definition: it aborts out | |
| 2299 of the minibuffer. This means, in effect, that it exits the minibuffer | |
| 2300 and then quits. (Simply quitting would return to the command loop | |
| 2301 @emph{within} the minibuffer.) The reason why @kbd{C-g} does not quit | |
| 2302 directly when the command reader is reading input is so that its meaning | |
| 2303 can be redefined in the minibuffer in this way. @kbd{C-g} following a | |
| 2304 prefix key is not redefined in the minibuffer, and it has its normal | |
| 2305 effect of canceling the prefix key and prefix argument. This too | |
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2306 would not be possible if @kbd{C-g} always quit directly. |
| 6260 | 2307 |
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2308 When @kbd{C-g} does directly quit, it does so by setting the variable |
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2309 @code{quit-flag} to @code{t}. Emacs checks this variable at appropriate |
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2310 times and quits if it is not @code{nil}. Setting @code{quit-flag} |
| 6260 | 2311 non-@code{nil} in any way thus causes a quit. |
| 2312 | |
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2313 At the level of C code, quitting cannot happen just anywhere; only at the |
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2314 special places that check @code{quit-flag}. The reason for this is |
| 6260 | 2315 that quitting at other places might leave an inconsistency in Emacs's |
| 2316 internal state. Because quitting is delayed until a safe place, quitting | |
| 2317 cannot make Emacs crash. | |
| 2318 | |
| 2319 Certain functions such as @code{read-key-sequence} or | |
| 2320 @code{read-quoted-char} prevent quitting entirely even though they wait | |
| 2321 for input. Instead of quitting, @kbd{C-g} serves as the requested | |
| 2322 input. In the case of @code{read-key-sequence}, this serves to bring | |
| 2323 about the special behavior of @kbd{C-g} in the command loop. In the | |
| 2324 case of @code{read-quoted-char}, this is so that @kbd{C-q} can be used | |
| 2325 to quote a @kbd{C-g}. | |
| 2326 | |
| 2327 You can prevent quitting for a portion of a Lisp function by binding | |
| 2328 the variable @code{inhibit-quit} to a non-@code{nil} value. Then, | |
| 2329 although @kbd{C-g} still sets @code{quit-flag} to @code{t} as usual, the | |
| 2330 usual result of this---a quit---is prevented. Eventually, | |
| 2331 @code{inhibit-quit} will become @code{nil} again, such as when its | |
| 2332 binding is unwound at the end of a @code{let} form. At that time, if | |
| 2333 @code{quit-flag} is still non-@code{nil}, the requested quit happens | |
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2334 immediately. This behavior is ideal when you wish to make sure that |
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2335 quitting does not happen within a ``critical section'' of the program. |
| 6260 | 2336 |
| 2337 @cindex @code{read-quoted-char} quitting | |
| 2338 In some functions (such as @code{read-quoted-char}), @kbd{C-g} is | |
|
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2339 handled in a special way that does not involve quitting. This is done |
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2340 by reading the input with @code{inhibit-quit} bound to @code{t}, and |
| 6260 | 2341 setting @code{quit-flag} to @code{nil} before @code{inhibit-quit} |
| 2342 becomes @code{nil} again. This excerpt from the definition of | |
| 2343 @code{read-quoted-char} shows how this is done; it also shows that | |
| 2344 normal quitting is permitted after the first character of input. | |
| 2345 | |
| 2346 @example | |
| 2347 (defun read-quoted-char (&optional prompt) | |
| 2348 "@dots{}@var{documentation}@dots{}" | |
|
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2349 (let ((message-log-max nil) done (first t) (code 0) char) |
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2350 (while (not done) |
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2351 (let ((inhibit-quit first) |
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2352 @dots{}) |
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2353 (and prompt (message "%s-" prompt)) |
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2354 (setq char (read-event)) |
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2355 (if inhibit-quit (setq quit-flag nil))) |
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2356 @r{@dots{}set the variable @code{code}@dots{}}) |
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2357 code)) |
| 6260 | 2358 @end example |
| 2359 | |
| 2360 @defvar quit-flag | |
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2361 If this variable is non-@code{nil}, then Emacs quits immediately, unless |
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2362 @code{inhibit-quit} is non-@code{nil}. Typing @kbd{C-g} ordinarily sets |
| 6260 | 2363 @code{quit-flag} non-@code{nil}, regardless of @code{inhibit-quit}. |
| 2364 @end defvar | |
| 2365 | |
| 2366 @defvar inhibit-quit | |
| 2367 This variable determines whether Emacs should quit when @code{quit-flag} | |
| 2368 is set to a value other than @code{nil}. If @code{inhibit-quit} is | |
| 2369 non-@code{nil}, then @code{quit-flag} has no special effect. | |
| 2370 @end defvar | |
| 2371 | |
| 2372 @deffn Command keyboard-quit | |
| 2373 This function signals the @code{quit} condition with @code{(signal 'quit | |
| 2374 nil)}. This is the same thing that quitting does. (See @code{signal} | |
| 2375 in @ref{Errors}.) | |
| 2376 @end deffn | |
| 2377 | |
| 2378 You can specify a character other than @kbd{C-g} to use for quitting. | |
| 2379 See the function @code{set-input-mode} in @ref{Terminal Input}. | |
| 2380 | |
| 2381 @node Prefix Command Arguments | |
| 2382 @section Prefix Command Arguments | |
| 2383 @cindex prefix argument | |
| 2384 @cindex raw prefix argument | |
| 2385 @cindex numeric prefix argument | |
| 2386 | |
| 2387 Most Emacs commands can use a @dfn{prefix argument}, a number | |
| 2388 specified before the command itself. (Don't confuse prefix arguments | |
|
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2389 with prefix keys.) The prefix argument is at all times represented by a |
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2390 value, which may be @code{nil}, meaning there is currently no prefix |
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2391 argument. Each command may use the prefix argument or ignore it. |
| 6260 | 2392 |
| 2393 There are two representations of the prefix argument: @dfn{raw} and | |
| 2394 @dfn{numeric}. The editor command loop uses the raw representation | |
| 2395 internally, and so do the Lisp variables that store the information, but | |
| 2396 commands can request either representation. | |
| 2397 | |
| 2398 Here are the possible values of a raw prefix argument: | |
| 2399 | |
| 2400 @itemize @bullet | |
| 2401 @item | |
| 2402 @code{nil}, meaning there is no prefix argument. Its numeric value is | |
| 2403 1, but numerous commands make a distinction between @code{nil} and the | |
| 2404 integer 1. | |
| 2405 | |
| 2406 @item | |
| 2407 An integer, which stands for itself. | |
| 2408 | |
| 2409 @item | |
| 2410 A list of one element, which is an integer. This form of prefix | |
| 2411 argument results from one or a succession of @kbd{C-u}'s with no | |
| 2412 digits. The numeric value is the integer in the list, but some | |
| 2413 commands make a distinction between such a list and an integer alone. | |
| 2414 | |
| 2415 @item | |
| 2416 The symbol @code{-}. This indicates that @kbd{M--} or @kbd{C-u -} was | |
| 2417 typed, without following digits. The equivalent numeric value is | |
| 2418 @minus{}1, but some commands make a distinction between the integer | |
| 2419 @minus{}1 and the symbol @code{-}. | |
| 2420 @end itemize | |
| 2421 | |
|
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2422 We illustrate these possibilities by calling the following function with |
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2423 various prefixes: |
| 6260 | 2424 |
| 2425 @example | |
| 2426 @group | |
| 2427 (defun display-prefix (arg) | |
| 2428 "Display the value of the raw prefix arg." | |
| 2429 (interactive "P") | |
| 2430 (message "%s" arg)) | |
| 2431 @end group | |
| 2432 @end example | |
| 2433 | |
| 2434 @noindent | |
| 2435 Here are the results of calling @code{display-prefix} with various | |
| 2436 raw prefix arguments: | |
| 2437 | |
| 2438 @example | |
| 2439 M-x display-prefix @print{} nil | |
| 2440 | |
| 2441 C-u M-x display-prefix @print{} (4) | |
| 2442 | |
| 2443 C-u C-u M-x display-prefix @print{} (16) | |
| 2444 | |
| 2445 C-u 3 M-x display-prefix @print{} 3 | |
| 2446 | |
| 2447 M-3 M-x display-prefix @print{} 3 ; @r{(Same as @code{C-u 3}.)} | |
| 2448 | |
| 2449 C-u - M-x display-prefix @print{} - | |
| 2450 | |
|
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2451 M-- M-x display-prefix @print{} - ; @r{(Same as @code{C-u -}.)} |
| 6260 | 2452 |
|
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2453 C-u - 7 M-x display-prefix @print{} -7 |
| 6260 | 2454 |
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2455 M-- 7 M-x display-prefix @print{} -7 ; @r{(Same as @code{C-u -7}.)} |
| 6260 | 2456 @end example |
| 2457 | |
| 2458 Emacs uses two variables to store the prefix argument: | |
| 2459 @code{prefix-arg} and @code{current-prefix-arg}. Commands such as | |
| 2460 @code{universal-argument} that set up prefix arguments for other | |
| 2461 commands store them in @code{prefix-arg}. In contrast, | |
| 2462 @code{current-prefix-arg} conveys the prefix argument to the current | |
| 2463 command, so setting it has no effect on the prefix arguments for future | |
| 2464 commands. | |
| 2465 | |
| 2466 Normally, commands specify which representation to use for the prefix | |
| 2467 argument, either numeric or raw, in the @code{interactive} declaration. | |
|
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2468 (@xref{Using Interactive}.) Alternatively, functions may look at the |
| 6260 | 2469 value of the prefix argument directly in the variable |
| 2470 @code{current-prefix-arg}, but this is less clean. | |
| 2471 | |
|
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2472 @defun prefix-numeric-value arg |
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2473 This function returns the numeric meaning of a valid raw prefix argument |
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2474 value, @var{arg}. The argument may be a symbol, a number, or a list. |
|
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2475 If it is @code{nil}, the value 1 is returned; if it is @code{-}, the |
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2476 value @minus{}1 is returned; if it is a number, that number is returned; |
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2477 if it is a list, the @sc{car} of that list (which should be a number) is |
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2478 returned. |
|
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2479 @end defun |
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2480 |
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2481 @defvar current-prefix-arg |
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2482 This variable holds the raw prefix argument for the @emph{current} |
|
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2483 command. Commands may examine it directly, but the usual method for |
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2484 accessing it is with @code{(interactive "P")}. |
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2485 @end defvar |
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2486 |
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2487 @defvar prefix-arg |
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2488 The value of this variable is the raw prefix argument for the |
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2489 @emph{next} editing command. Commands such as @code{universal-argument} |
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2490 that specify prefix arguments for the following command work by setting |
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2491 this variable. |
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2492 @end defvar |
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2493 |
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2494 @defvar last-prefix-arg |
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2495 The raw prefix argument value used by the previous command. |
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2496 @end defvar |
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2497 |
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2498 The following commands exist to set up prefix arguments for the |
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2499 following command. Do not call them for any other reason. |
| 6260 | 2500 |
| 2501 @deffn Command universal-argument | |
| 2502 This command reads input and specifies a prefix argument for the | |
| 2503 following command. Don't call this command yourself unless you know | |
| 2504 what you are doing. | |
| 2505 @end deffn | |
| 2506 | |
| 2507 @deffn Command digit-argument arg | |
| 2508 This command adds to the prefix argument for the following command. The | |
| 2509 argument @var{arg} is the raw prefix argument as it was before this | |
| 2510 command; it is used to compute the updated prefix argument. Don't call | |
| 2511 this command yourself unless you know what you are doing. | |
| 2512 @end deffn | |
| 2513 | |
| 2514 @deffn Command negative-argument arg | |
| 2515 This command adds to the numeric argument for the next command. The | |
| 2516 argument @var{arg} is the raw prefix argument as it was before this | |
| 2517 command; its value is negated to form the new prefix argument. Don't | |
| 2518 call this command yourself unless you know what you are doing. | |
| 2519 @end deffn | |
| 2520 | |
| 2521 @node Recursive Editing | |
| 2522 @section Recursive Editing | |
| 2523 @cindex recursive command loop | |
| 2524 @cindex recursive editing level | |
| 2525 @cindex command loop, recursive | |
| 2526 | |
|
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2527 The Emacs command loop is entered automatically when Emacs starts up. |
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2528 This top-level invocation of the command loop never exits; it keeps |
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2529 running as long as Emacs does. Lisp programs can also invoke the |
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2530 command loop. Since this makes more than one activation of the command |
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2531 loop, we call it @dfn{recursive editing}. A recursive editing level has |
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2532 the effect of suspending whatever command invoked it and permitting the |
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2533 user to do arbitrary editing before resuming that command. |
| 6260 | 2534 |
| 2535 The commands available during recursive editing are the same ones | |
| 2536 available in the top-level editing loop and defined in the keymaps. | |
| 2537 Only a few special commands exit the recursive editing level; the others | |
|
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2538 return to the recursive editing level when they finish. (The special |
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2539 commands for exiting are always available, but they do nothing when |
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2540 recursive editing is not in progress.) |
| 6260 | 2541 |
| 2542 All command loops, including recursive ones, set up all-purpose error | |
| 2543 handlers so that an error in a command run from the command loop will | |
| 2544 not exit the loop. | |
| 2545 | |
| 2546 @cindex minibuffer input | |
| 2547 Minibuffer input is a special kind of recursive editing. It has a few | |
| 2548 special wrinkles, such as enabling display of the minibuffer and the | |
| 2549 minibuffer window, but fewer than you might suppose. Certain keys | |
| 2550 behave differently in the minibuffer, but that is only because of the | |
| 2551 minibuffer's local map; if you switch windows, you get the usual Emacs | |
| 2552 commands. | |
| 2553 | |
| 2554 @cindex @code{throw} example | |
| 2555 @kindex exit | |
| 2556 @cindex exit recursive editing | |
| 2557 @cindex aborting | |
| 2558 To invoke a recursive editing level, call the function | |
| 2559 @code{recursive-edit}. This function contains the command loop; it also | |
| 2560 contains a call to @code{catch} with tag @code{exit}, which makes it | |
| 2561 possible to exit the recursive editing level by throwing to @code{exit} | |
| 2562 (@pxref{Catch and Throw}). If you throw a value other than @code{t}, | |
| 2563 then @code{recursive-edit} returns normally to the function that called | |
| 2564 it. The command @kbd{C-M-c} (@code{exit-recursive-edit}) does this. | |
| 2565 Throwing a @code{t} value causes @code{recursive-edit} to quit, so that | |
| 2566 control returns to the command loop one level up. This is called | |
| 2567 @dfn{aborting}, and is done by @kbd{C-]} (@code{abort-recursive-edit}). | |
| 2568 | |
| 2569 Most applications should not use recursive editing, except as part of | |
| 2570 using the minibuffer. Usually it is more convenient for the user if you | |
| 2571 change the major mode of the current buffer temporarily to a special | |
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2572 major mode, which should have a command to go back to the previous mode. |
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2573 (The @kbd{e} command in Rmail uses this technique.) Or, if you wish to |
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2574 give the user different text to edit ``recursively'', create and select |
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2575 a new buffer in a special mode. In this mode, define a command to |
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2576 complete the processing and go back to the previous buffer. (The |
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2577 @kbd{m} command in Rmail does this.) |
| 6260 | 2578 |
| 2579 Recursive edits are useful in debugging. You can insert a call to | |
| 2580 @code{debug} into a function definition as a sort of breakpoint, so that | |
| 2581 you can look around when the function gets there. @code{debug} invokes | |
| 2582 a recursive edit but also provides the other features of the debugger. | |
| 2583 | |
| 2584 Recursive editing levels are also used when you type @kbd{C-r} in | |
| 2585 @code{query-replace} or use @kbd{C-x q} (@code{kbd-macro-query}). | |
| 2586 | |
| 2587 @defun recursive-edit | |
| 2588 @cindex suspend evaluation | |
| 2589 This function invokes the editor command loop. It is called | |
| 2590 automatically by the initialization of Emacs, to let the user begin | |
| 2591 editing. When called from a Lisp program, it enters a recursive editing | |
| 2592 level. | |
| 2593 | |
| 2594 In the following example, the function @code{simple-rec} first | |
| 2595 advances point one word, then enters a recursive edit, printing out a | |
| 2596 message in the echo area. The user can then do any editing desired, and | |
| 2597 then type @kbd{C-M-c} to exit and continue executing @code{simple-rec}. | |
| 2598 | |
| 2599 @example | |
| 2600 (defun simple-rec () | |
| 2601 (forward-word 1) | |
|
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2602 (message "Recursive edit in progress") |
| 6260 | 2603 (recursive-edit) |
| 2604 (forward-word 1)) | |
| 2605 @result{} simple-rec | |
| 2606 (simple-rec) | |
| 2607 @result{} nil | |
| 2608 @end example | |
| 2609 @end defun | |
| 2610 | |
| 2611 @deffn Command exit-recursive-edit | |
| 2612 This function exits from the innermost recursive edit (including | |
| 2613 minibuffer input). Its definition is effectively @code{(throw 'exit | |
| 2614 nil)}. | |
| 2615 @end deffn | |
| 2616 | |
| 2617 @deffn Command abort-recursive-edit | |
| 2618 This function aborts the command that requested the innermost recursive | |
| 2619 edit (including minibuffer input), by signaling @code{quit} | |
| 2620 after exiting the recursive edit. Its definition is effectively | |
| 2621 @code{(throw 'exit t)}. @xref{Quitting}. | |
| 2622 @end deffn | |
| 2623 | |
| 2624 @deffn Command top-level | |
| 2625 This function exits all recursive editing levels; it does not return a | |
| 2626 value, as it jumps completely out of any computation directly back to | |
| 2627 the main command loop. | |
| 2628 @end deffn | |
| 2629 | |
| 2630 @defun recursion-depth | |
| 2631 This function returns the current depth of recursive edits. When no | |
| 2632 recursive edit is active, it returns 0. | |
| 2633 @end defun | |
| 2634 | |
| 2635 @node Disabling Commands | |
| 2636 @section Disabling Commands | |
| 2637 @cindex disabled command | |
| 2638 | |
| 2639 @dfn{Disabling a command} marks the command as requiring user | |
| 2640 confirmation before it can be executed. Disabling is used for commands | |
| 2641 which might be confusing to beginning users, to prevent them from using | |
| 2642 the commands by accident. | |
| 2643 | |
| 2644 @kindex disabled | |
| 2645 The low-level mechanism for disabling a command is to put a | |
| 2646 non-@code{nil} @code{disabled} property on the Lisp symbol for the | |
| 2647 command. These properties are normally set up by the user's | |
| 25875 | 2648 init file (@pxref{Init File}) with Lisp expressions such as this: |
| 6260 | 2649 |
| 2650 @example | |
| 2651 (put 'upcase-region 'disabled t) | |
| 2652 @end example | |
| 2653 | |
| 2654 @noindent | |
| 25875 | 2655 For a few commands, these properties are present by default (you can |
| 2656 remove them in your init file if you wish). | |
| 6260 | 2657 |
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2658 If the value of the @code{disabled} property is a string, the message |
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2659 saying the command is disabled includes that string. For example: |
| 6260 | 2660 |
| 2661 @example | |
| 2662 (put 'delete-region 'disabled | |
| 2663 "Text deleted this way cannot be yanked back!\n") | |
| 2664 @end example | |
| 2665 | |
| 2666 @xref{Disabling,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}, for the details on | |
| 2667 what happens when a disabled command is invoked interactively. | |
| 2668 Disabling a command has no effect on calling it as a function from Lisp | |
| 2669 programs. | |
| 2670 | |
| 2671 @deffn Command enable-command command | |
| 2672 Allow @var{command} to be executed without special confirmation from now | |
| 25875 | 2673 on, and (if the user confirms) alter the user's init file (@pxref{Init |
| 2674 File}) so that this will apply to future sessions. | |
| 6260 | 2675 @end deffn |
| 2676 | |
| 2677 @deffn Command disable-command command | |
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2678 Require special confirmation to execute @var{command} from now on, and |
| 25875 | 2679 (if the user confirms) alter the user's init file so that this |
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2680 will apply to future sessions. |
| 6260 | 2681 @end deffn |
| 2682 | |
| 2683 @defvar disabled-command-hook | |
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2684 When the user invokes a disabled command interactively, this normal hook |
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2685 is run instead of the disabled command. The hook functions can use |
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2686 @code{this-command-keys} to determine what the user typed to run the |
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2687 command, and thus find the command itself. @xref{Hooks}. |
| 6260 | 2688 |
| 2689 By default, @code{disabled-command-hook} contains a function that asks | |
| 2690 the user whether to proceed. | |
| 2691 @end defvar | |
| 2692 | |
| 2693 @node Command History | |
| 2694 @section Command History | |
| 2695 @cindex command history | |
| 2696 @cindex complex command | |
| 2697 @cindex history of commands | |
| 2698 | |
| 2699 The command loop keeps a history of the complex commands that have | |
| 2700 been executed, to make it convenient to repeat these commands. A | |
| 2701 @dfn{complex command} is one for which the interactive argument reading | |
| 2702 uses the minibuffer. This includes any @kbd{M-x} command, any | |
| 12098 | 2703 @kbd{M-:} command, and any command whose @code{interactive} |
| 6260 | 2704 specification reads an argument from the minibuffer. Explicit use of |
| 2705 the minibuffer during the execution of the command itself does not cause | |
| 2706 the command to be considered complex. | |
| 2707 | |
| 2708 @defvar command-history | |
| 2709 This variable's value is a list of recent complex commands, each | |
| 2710 represented as a form to evaluate. It continues to accumulate all | |
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2711 complex commands for the duration of the editing session, but when it |
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2712 reaches the maximum size (specified by the variable |
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2713 @code{history-length}), the oldest elements are deleted as new ones are |
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2714 added. |
| 6260 | 2715 |
| 2716 @example | |
| 2717 @group | |
| 2718 command-history | |
| 2719 @result{} ((switch-to-buffer "chistory.texi") | |
| 2720 (describe-key "^X^[") | |
| 2721 (visit-tags-table "~/emacs/src/") | |
| 2722 (find-tag "repeat-complex-command")) | |
| 2723 @end group | |
| 2724 @end example | |
| 2725 @end defvar | |
| 2726 | |
| 2727 This history list is actually a special case of minibuffer history | |
| 2728 (@pxref{Minibuffer History}), with one special twist: the elements are | |
| 2729 expressions rather than strings. | |
| 2730 | |
| 2731 There are a number of commands devoted to the editing and recall of | |
| 2732 previous commands. The commands @code{repeat-complex-command}, and | |
| 2733 @code{list-command-history} are described in the user manual | |
| 2734 (@pxref{Repetition,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}). Within the | |
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2735 minibuffer, the usual minibuffer history commands are available. |
| 6260 | 2736 |
| 2737 @node Keyboard Macros | |
| 2738 @section Keyboard Macros | |
| 2739 @cindex keyboard macros | |
| 2740 | |
| 2741 A @dfn{keyboard macro} is a canned sequence of input events that can | |
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2742 be considered a command and made the definition of a key. The Lisp |
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2743 representation of a keyboard macro is a string or vector containing the |
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2744 events. Don't confuse keyboard macros with Lisp macros |
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2745 (@pxref{Macros}). |
| 6260 | 2746 |
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2747 @defun execute-kbd-macro kbdmacro &optional count |
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2748 This function executes @var{kbdmacro} as a sequence of events. If |
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2749 @var{kbdmacro} is a string or vector, then the events in it are executed |
| 6260 | 2750 exactly as if they had been input by the user. The sequence is |
| 2751 @emph{not} expected to be a single key sequence; normally a keyboard | |
| 2752 macro definition consists of several key sequences concatenated. | |
| 2753 | |
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2754 If @var{kbdmacro} is a symbol, then its function definition is used in |
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2755 place of @var{kbdmacro}. If that is another symbol, this process repeats. |
| 6260 | 2756 Eventually the result should be a string or vector. If the result is |
| 2757 not a symbol, string, or vector, an error is signaled. | |
| 2758 | |
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2759 The argument @var{count} is a repeat count; @var{kbdmacro} is executed that |
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2760 many times. If @var{count} is omitted or @code{nil}, @var{kbdmacro} is |
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2761 executed once. If it is 0, @var{kbdmacro} is executed over and over until it |
| 6260 | 2762 encounters an error or a failing search. |
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2763 |
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2764 @xref{Reading One Event}, for an example of using @code{execute-kbd-macro}. |
| 6260 | 2765 @end defun |
| 2766 | |
| 2767 @defvar executing-macro | |
| 2768 This variable contains the string or vector that defines the keyboard | |
| 2769 macro that is currently executing. It is @code{nil} if no macro is | |
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2770 currently executing. A command can test this variable so as to behave |
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2771 differently when run from an executing macro. Do not set this variable |
| 6260 | 2772 yourself. |
| 2773 @end defvar | |
| 2774 | |
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2775 @defvar defining-kbd-macro |
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2776 This variable indicates whether a keyboard macro is being defined. A |
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2777 command can test this variable so as to behave differently while a macro |
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2778 is being defined. The commands @code{start-kbd-macro} and |
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2779 @code{end-kbd-macro} set this variable---do not set it yourself. |
| 12067 | 2780 |
| 12098 | 2781 The variable is always local to the current terminal and cannot be |
| 12067 | 2782 buffer-local. @xref{Multiple Displays}. |
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2783 @end defvar |
| 6260 | 2784 |
| 12098 | 2785 @defvar last-kbd-macro |
| 2786 This variable is the definition of the most recently defined keyboard | |
| 2787 macro. Its value is a string or vector, or @code{nil}. | |
| 2788 | |
| 2789 The variable is always local to the current terminal and cannot be | |
| 2790 buffer-local. @xref{Multiple Displays}. | |
| 2791 @end defvar | |
| 2792 | |
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2793 @defvar kbd-macro-termination-hook |
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2794 This normal hook (@pxref{Standard Hooks}) is run when a keyboard |
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2795 macro terminates, regardless of what caused it to terminate (reaching |
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2796 the macro end or an error which ended the macro prematurely). |
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2797 @end defvar |
