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| author | Gerd Moellmann <gerd@gnu.org> |
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| date | Fri, 11 May 2001 10:53:56 +0000 |
| parents | d44c87635f6e |
| children | 1ebd03c6b468 |
| rev | line source |
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| 25829 | 1 @c This is part of the Emacs manual. |
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2 @c Copyright (C) 1985,86,87,93,94,95,97,00,2001 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
| 25829 | 3 @c See file emacs.texi for copying conditions. |
| 4 @iftex | |
| 5 @chapter Killing and Moving Text | |
| 6 | |
| 7 @dfn{Killing} means erasing text and copying it into the @dfn{kill | |
| 8 ring}, from which it can be retrieved by @dfn{yanking} it. Some systems | |
| 9 use the terms ``cutting'' and ``pasting'' for these operations. | |
| 10 | |
| 11 The commonest way of moving or copying text within Emacs is to kill it | |
| 12 and later yank it elsewhere in one or more places. This is very safe | |
| 13 because Emacs remembers several recent kills, not just the last one. It | |
| 14 is versatile, because the many commands for killing syntactic units can | |
| 15 also be used for moving those units. But there are other ways of | |
| 16 copying text for special purposes. | |
| 17 | |
| 18 Emacs has only one kill ring for all buffers, so you can kill text in | |
| 19 one buffer and yank it in another buffer. | |
| 20 | |
| 21 @end iftex | |
| 22 | |
| 23 @node Killing, Yanking, Mark, Top | |
| 24 @section Deletion and Killing | |
| 25 | |
| 26 @cindex killing text | |
| 27 @cindex cutting text | |
| 28 @cindex deletion | |
| 29 Most commands which erase text from the buffer save it in the kill | |
| 30 ring so that you can move or copy it to other parts of the buffer. | |
| 31 These commands are known as @dfn{kill} commands. The rest of the | |
| 32 commands that erase text do not save it in the kill ring; they are known | |
| 33 as @dfn{delete} commands. (This distinction is made only for erasure of | |
| 34 text in the buffer.) If you do a kill or delete command by mistake, you | |
| 35 can use the @kbd{C-x u} (@code{undo}) command to undo it | |
| 36 (@pxref{Undo}). | |
| 37 | |
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38 @vindex kill-read-only-ok |
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39 @cindex read-only text, killing |
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40 You cannot kill read-only text, since such text does not allow any |
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41 kind of modification. But some users like to use the kill commands to |
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42 copy read-only text into the kill ring, without actually changing it. |
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43 If you set the variable @code{kill-read-only-ok} to a non-@code{nil} |
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44 value, the kill commands work specially in a read-only buffer: they |
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45 move over text, and copy it to the kill ring, without actually |
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46 deleting it from the buffer. When this happens, a message in the echo |
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47 area tells you what is happening. |
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48 |
| 25829 | 49 The delete commands include @kbd{C-d} (@code{delete-char}) and |
| 50 @key{DEL} (@code{delete-backward-char}), which delete only one character at | |
| 51 a time, and those commands that delete only spaces or newlines. Commands | |
| 52 that can destroy significant amounts of nontrivial data generally kill. | |
| 53 The commands' names and individual descriptions use the words @samp{kill} | |
| 54 and @samp{delete} to say which they do. | |
| 55 | |
| 30865 | 56 @cindex Delete Selection mode |
| 57 @cindex mode, Delete Selection | |
| 58 @findex delete-selection-mode | |
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59 Many window systems follow the convention that insertion while text |
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60 is selected deletes the selected text. You can make Emacs behave this |
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61 way by enabling Delete Selection mode, with @kbd{M-x |
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62 delete-selection-mode}, or using Custom. Another effect of this mode |
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63 is that @key{DEL}, @kbd{C-d} and some other keys, when a selection |
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64 exists, will kill the whole selection. It also enables Transient Mark |
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65 mode (@pxref{Transient Mark}). |
| 30865 | 66 |
| 25829 | 67 @menu |
| 68 * Deletion:: Commands for deleting small amounts of text and | |
| 69 blank areas. | |
| 70 * Killing by Lines:: How to kill entire lines of text at one time. | |
| 71 * Other Kill Commands:: Commands to kill large regions of text and | |
| 72 syntactic units such as words and sentences. | |
| 73 @end menu | |
| 74 | |
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75 @need 1500 |
| 25829 | 76 @node Deletion |
| 77 @subsection Deletion | |
| 78 @findex delete-backward-char | |
| 79 @findex delete-char | |
| 80 | |
| 81 @table @kbd | |
| 82 @item C-d | |
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83 @itemx @key{Delete} |
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84 Delete next character (@code{delete-char}). If your keyboard has a |
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85 @key{Delete} function key (usually located in the edit keypad), Emacs |
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86 binds it to @code{delete-char} as well. |
| 25829 | 87 @item @key{DEL} |
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88 @itemx @key{BS} |
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89 Delete previous character (@code{delete-backward-char}). Some keyboards |
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90 refer to this key as a ``backspace key'' and label it with a left arrow. |
| 25829 | 91 @item M-\ |
| 92 Delete spaces and tabs around point (@code{delete-horizontal-space}). | |
| 93 @item M-@key{SPC} | |
| 94 Delete spaces and tabs around point, leaving one space | |
| 95 (@code{just-one-space}). | |
| 96 @item C-x C-o | |
| 97 Delete blank lines around the current line (@code{delete-blank-lines}). | |
| 98 @item M-^ | |
| 99 Join two lines by deleting the intervening newline, along with any | |
| 100 indentation following it (@code{delete-indentation}). | |
| 101 @end table | |
| 102 | |
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103 @kindex DEL |
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104 @kindex C-d |
| 25829 | 105 The most basic delete commands are @kbd{C-d} (@code{delete-char}) and |
| 106 @key{DEL} (@code{delete-backward-char}). @kbd{C-d} deletes the | |
| 107 character after point, the one the cursor is ``on top of.'' This | |
| 108 doesn't move point. @key{DEL} deletes the character before the cursor, | |
| 109 and moves point back. You can delete newlines like any other characters | |
| 110 in the buffer; deleting a newline joins two lines. Actually, @kbd{C-d} | |
| 111 and @key{DEL} aren't always delete commands; when given arguments, they | |
| 112 kill instead, since they can erase more than one character this way. | |
| 113 | |
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114 @kindex BACKSPACE |
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115 @kindex BS |
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116 @kindex DELETE |
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117 Every keyboard has a large key, labeled @key{DEL}, @key{BACKSPACE}, |
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118 @key{BS} or @key{DELETE}, which is a short distance above the |
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119 @key{RET} or @key{ENTER} key and is normally used for erasing what you |
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120 have typed. Regardless of the actual name on the key, in Emacs it is |
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121 equivalent to @key{DEL}---or it should be. |
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122 |
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123 Many keyboards (including standard PC keyboards) have a |
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124 @key{BACKSPACE} key a short ways above @key{RET} or @key{ENTER}, and a |
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125 @key{DELETE} key elsewhere. In that case, the @key{BACKSPACE} key is |
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126 @key{DEL}, and the @key{DELETE} key is equivalent to @kbd{C-d}---or it |
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127 should be. |
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128 |
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129 Why do we say ``or it should be''? When Emacs starts up using a |
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130 window system, it determines automatically which key or keys should be |
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131 equivalent to @key{DEL}. So the @key{BACKSPACE} and/or @key{DELETE} |
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132 keys normally do the right things. But in some unusual cases Emacs |
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133 gets the wrong information from the system. If these keys don't do |
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134 what they ought to do, you need to tell Emacs which key to use for |
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135 @key{DEL}. @xref{DEL Gets Help}, for how to do this. |
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136 |
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137 @findex normal-erase-is-backspace-mode |
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138 On most text-only terminals, Emacs cannot tell which keys the |
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139 keyboard really has, so it follows a uniform plan which may or may not |
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140 fit your keyboard. The uniform plan is that the ASCII @key{DEL} |
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141 character deletes, and the ASCII @key{BS} (backspace) character asks |
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142 for help (it is the same as @kbd{C-h}). If this is not right for your |
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143 keyboard, if you find that the key which ought to delete backwards |
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144 enters Help instead, see @ref{DEL Gets Help}. |
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145 |
| 25829 | 146 @kindex M-\ |
| 147 @findex delete-horizontal-space | |
| 148 @kindex M-SPC | |
| 149 @findex just-one-space | |
| 150 The other delete commands are those which delete only whitespace | |
| 151 characters: spaces, tabs and newlines. @kbd{M-\} | |
| 152 (@code{delete-horizontal-space}) deletes all the spaces and tab | |
| 153 characters before and after point. @kbd{M-@key{SPC}} | |
| 154 (@code{just-one-space}) does likewise but leaves a single space after | |
| 155 point, regardless of the number of spaces that existed previously (even | |
| 156 zero). | |
| 157 | |
| 158 @kbd{C-x C-o} (@code{delete-blank-lines}) deletes all blank lines | |
| 159 after the current line. If the current line is blank, it deletes all | |
| 160 blank lines preceding the current line as well (leaving one blank line, | |
| 161 the current line). | |
| 162 | |
| 163 @kbd{M-^} (@code{delete-indentation}) joins the current line and the | |
| 164 previous line, by deleting a newline and all surrounding spaces, usually | |
| 165 leaving a single space. @xref{Indentation,M-^}. | |
| 166 | |
| 167 @node Killing by Lines | |
| 168 @subsection Killing by Lines | |
| 169 | |
| 170 @table @kbd | |
| 171 @item C-k | |
| 172 Kill rest of line or one or more lines (@code{kill-line}). | |
| 173 @end table | |
| 174 | |
| 175 @kindex C-k | |
| 176 @findex kill-line | |
| 177 The simplest kill command is @kbd{C-k}. If given at the beginning of | |
| 178 a line, it kills all the text on the line, leaving it blank. When used | |
| 179 on a blank line, it kills the whole line including its newline. To kill | |
| 180 an entire non-blank line, go to the beginning and type @kbd{C-k} twice. | |
| 181 | |
| 182 More generally, @kbd{C-k} kills from point up to the end of the line, | |
| 183 unless it is at the end of a line. In that case it kills the newline | |
| 184 following point, thus merging the next line into the current one. | |
| 185 Spaces and tabs that you can't see at the end of the line are ignored | |
| 186 when deciding which case applies, so if point appears to be at the end | |
| 187 of the line, you can be sure @kbd{C-k} will kill the newline. | |
| 188 | |
| 189 When @kbd{C-k} is given a positive argument, it kills that many lines | |
| 190 and the newlines that follow them (however, text on the current line | |
| 191 before point is spared). With a negative argument @minus{}@var{n}, it | |
| 192 kills @var{n} lines preceding the current line (together with the text | |
| 193 on the current line before point). Thus, @kbd{C-u - 2 C-k} at the front | |
| 194 of a line kills the two previous lines. | |
| 195 | |
| 196 @kbd{C-k} with an argument of zero kills the text before point on the | |
| 197 current line. | |
| 198 | |
| 199 @vindex kill-whole-line | |
| 200 If the variable @code{kill-whole-line} is non-@code{nil}, @kbd{C-k} at | |
| 201 the very beginning of a line kills the entire line including the | |
| 202 following newline. This variable is normally @code{nil}. | |
| 203 | |
| 204 @node Other Kill Commands | |
| 205 @subsection Other Kill Commands | |
| 206 @findex kill-region | |
| 207 @kindex C-w | |
| 208 | |
| 209 @c DoubleWideCommands | |
| 210 @table @kbd | |
| 211 @item C-w | |
| 212 Kill region (from point to the mark) (@code{kill-region}). | |
| 213 @item M-d | |
| 214 Kill word (@code{kill-word}). @xref{Words}. | |
| 215 @item M-@key{DEL} | |
| 216 Kill word backwards (@code{backward-kill-word}). | |
| 217 @item C-x @key{DEL} | |
| 218 Kill back to beginning of sentence (@code{backward-kill-sentence}). | |
| 219 @xref{Sentences}. | |
| 220 @item M-k | |
| 221 Kill to end of sentence (@code{kill-sentence}). | |
| 222 @item C-M-k | |
| 223 Kill sexp (@code{kill-sexp}). @xref{Lists}. | |
| 224 @item M-z @var{char} | |
| 225 Kill through the next occurrence of @var{char} (@code{zap-to-char}). | |
| 226 @end table | |
| 227 | |
| 228 A kill command which is very general is @kbd{C-w} | |
| 229 (@code{kill-region}), which kills everything between point and the | |
| 230 mark. With this command, you can kill any contiguous sequence of | |
| 231 characters, if you first set the region around them. | |
| 232 | |
| 233 @kindex M-z | |
| 234 @findex zap-to-char | |
| 235 A convenient way of killing is combined with searching: @kbd{M-z} | |
| 236 (@code{zap-to-char}) reads a character and kills from point up to (and | |
| 237 including) the next occurrence of that character in the buffer. A | |
| 238 numeric argument acts as a repeat count. A negative argument means to | |
| 239 search backward and kill text before point. | |
| 240 | |
| 241 Other syntactic units can be killed: words, with @kbd{M-@key{DEL}} and | |
| 242 @kbd{M-d} (@pxref{Words}); sexps, with @kbd{C-M-k} (@pxref{Lists}); and | |
| 243 sentences, with @kbd{C-x @key{DEL}} and @kbd{M-k} | |
| 244 (@pxref{Sentences}).@refill | |
| 245 | |
| 246 You can use kill commands in read-only buffers. They don't actually | |
| 247 change the buffer, and they beep to warn you of that, but they do copy | |
| 248 the text you tried to kill into the kill ring, so you can yank it into | |
| 249 other buffers. Most of the kill commands move point across the text | |
| 250 they copy in this way, so that successive kill commands build up a | |
| 251 single kill ring entry as usual. | |
| 252 | |
| 253 @node Yanking, Accumulating Text, Killing, Top | |
| 254 @section Yanking | |
| 255 @cindex moving text | |
| 256 @cindex copying text | |
| 257 @cindex kill ring | |
| 258 @cindex yanking | |
| 259 @cindex pasting | |
| 260 | |
| 261 @dfn{Yanking} means reinserting text previously killed. This is what | |
| 262 some systems call ``pasting.'' The usual way to move or copy text is to | |
| 263 kill it and then yank it elsewhere one or more times. | |
| 264 | |
| 265 @table @kbd | |
| 266 @item C-y | |
| 267 Yank last killed text (@code{yank}). | |
| 268 @item M-y | |
| 269 Replace text just yanked with an earlier batch of killed text | |
| 270 (@code{yank-pop}). | |
| 271 @item M-w | |
| 272 Save region as last killed text without actually killing it | |
| 273 (@code{kill-ring-save}). | |
| 274 @item C-M-w | |
| 275 Append next kill to last batch of killed text (@code{append-next-kill}). | |
| 276 @end table | |
| 277 | |
| 278 @menu | |
| 279 * Kill Ring:: Where killed text is stored. Basic yanking. | |
| 280 * Appending Kills:: Several kills in a row all yank together. | |
| 281 * Earlier Kills:: Yanking something killed some time ago. | |
| 282 @end menu | |
| 283 | |
| 284 @node Kill Ring | |
| 285 @subsection The Kill Ring | |
| 286 | |
| 287 All killed text is recorded in the @dfn{kill ring}, a list of blocks of | |
| 288 text that have been killed. There is only one kill ring, shared by all | |
| 289 buffers, so you can kill text in one buffer and yank it in another buffer. | |
| 290 This is the usual way to move text from one file to another. | |
| 291 (@xref{Accumulating Text}, for some other ways.) | |
| 292 | |
| 293 @kindex C-y | |
| 294 @findex yank | |
| 295 The command @kbd{C-y} (@code{yank}) reinserts the text of the most recent | |
| 296 kill. It leaves the cursor at the end of the text. It sets the mark at | |
| 297 the beginning of the text. @xref{Mark}. | |
| 298 | |
| 299 @kbd{C-u C-y} leaves the cursor in front of the text, and sets the | |
| 300 mark after it. This happens only if the argument is specified with just | |
| 301 a @kbd{C-u}, precisely. Any other sort of argument, including @kbd{C-u} | |
| 302 and digits, specifies an earlier kill to yank (@pxref{Earlier Kills}). | |
| 303 | |
| 304 @kindex M-w | |
| 305 @findex kill-ring-save | |
| 306 To copy a block of text, you can use @kbd{M-w} | |
| 307 (@code{kill-ring-save}), which copies the region into the kill ring | |
| 308 without removing it from the buffer. This is approximately equivalent | |
| 309 to @kbd{C-w} followed by @kbd{C-x u}, except that @kbd{M-w} does not | |
| 310 alter the undo history and does not temporarily change the screen. | |
| 311 | |
| 312 @node Appending Kills | |
| 313 @subsection Appending Kills | |
| 314 | |
| 315 @cindex appending kills in the ring | |
| 316 @cindex television | |
| 317 Normally, each kill command pushes a new entry onto the kill ring. | |
| 318 However, two or more kill commands in a row combine their text into a | |
| 319 single entry, so that a single @kbd{C-y} yanks all the text as a unit, | |
| 320 just as it was before it was killed. | |
| 321 | |
| 322 Thus, if you want to yank text as a unit, you need not kill all of it | |
| 323 with one command; you can keep killing line after line, or word after | |
| 324 word, until you have killed it all, and you can still get it all back at | |
| 325 once. | |
| 326 | |
| 327 Commands that kill forward from point add onto the end of the previous | |
| 328 killed text. Commands that kill backward from point add text onto the | |
| 329 beginning. This way, any sequence of mixed forward and backward kill | |
| 330 commands puts all the killed text into one entry without rearrangement. | |
| 331 Numeric arguments do not break the sequence of appending kills. For | |
| 332 example, suppose the buffer contains this text: | |
| 333 | |
| 334 @example | |
| 335 This is a line @point{}of sample text. | |
| 336 @end example | |
| 337 | |
| 338 @noindent | |
| 339 with point shown by @point{}. If you type @kbd{M-d M-@key{DEL} M-d | |
| 340 M-@key{DEL}}, killing alternately forward and backward, you end up with | |
| 341 @samp{a line of sample} as one entry in the kill ring, and @samp{This | |
| 342 is@ @ text.} in the buffer. (Note the double space, which you can clean | |
| 343 up with @kbd{M-@key{SPC}} or @kbd{M-q}.) | |
| 344 | |
| 345 Another way to kill the same text is to move back two words with | |
| 346 @kbd{M-b M-b}, then kill all four words forward with @kbd{C-u M-d}. | |
| 347 This produces exactly the same results in the buffer and in the kill | |
| 348 ring. @kbd{M-f M-f C-u M-@key{DEL}} kills the same text, all going | |
| 349 backward; once again, the result is the same. The text in the kill ring | |
| 350 entry always has the same order that it had in the buffer before you | |
| 351 killed it. | |
| 352 | |
| 353 @kindex C-M-w | |
| 354 @findex append-next-kill | |
| 355 If a kill command is separated from the last kill command by other | |
| 356 commands (not just numeric arguments), it starts a new entry on the kill | |
| 357 ring. But you can force it to append by first typing the command | |
| 358 @kbd{C-M-w} (@code{append-next-kill}) right before it. The @kbd{C-M-w} | |
| 359 tells the following command, if it is a kill command, to append the text | |
| 360 it kills to the last killed text, instead of starting a new entry. With | |
| 361 @kbd{C-M-w}, you can kill several separated pieces of text and | |
| 362 accumulate them to be yanked back in one place.@refill | |
| 363 | |
| 364 A kill command following @kbd{M-w} does not append to the text that | |
| 365 @kbd{M-w} copied into the kill ring. | |
| 366 | |
| 367 @node Earlier Kills | |
| 368 @subsection Yanking Earlier Kills | |
| 369 | |
| 370 @cindex yanking previous kills | |
| 371 @kindex M-y | |
| 372 @findex yank-pop | |
| 373 To recover killed text that is no longer the most recent kill, use the | |
| 374 @kbd{M-y} command (@code{yank-pop}). It takes the text previously | |
| 375 yanked and replaces it with the text from an earlier kill. So, to | |
| 376 recover the text of the next-to-the-last kill, first use @kbd{C-y} to | |
| 377 yank the last kill, and then use @kbd{M-y} to replace it with the | |
| 378 previous kill. @kbd{M-y} is allowed only after a @kbd{C-y} or another | |
| 379 @kbd{M-y}. | |
| 380 | |
| 381 You can understand @kbd{M-y} in terms of a ``last yank'' pointer which | |
| 382 points at an entry in the kill ring. Each time you kill, the ``last | |
| 383 yank'' pointer moves to the newly made entry at the front of the ring. | |
| 384 @kbd{C-y} yanks the entry which the ``last yank'' pointer points to. | |
| 385 @kbd{M-y} moves the ``last yank'' pointer to a different entry, and the | |
| 386 text in the buffer changes to match. Enough @kbd{M-y} commands can move | |
| 387 the pointer to any entry in the ring, so you can get any entry into the | |
| 388 buffer. Eventually the pointer reaches the end of the ring; the next | |
| 389 @kbd{M-y} moves it to the first entry again. | |
| 390 | |
| 391 @kbd{M-y} moves the ``last yank'' pointer around the ring, but it does | |
| 392 not change the order of the entries in the ring, which always runs from | |
| 393 the most recent kill at the front to the oldest one still remembered. | |
| 394 | |
| 395 @kbd{M-y} can take a numeric argument, which tells it how many entries | |
| 396 to advance the ``last yank'' pointer by. A negative argument moves the | |
| 397 pointer toward the front of the ring; from the front of the ring, it | |
| 398 moves ``around'' to the last entry and continues forward from there. | |
| 399 | |
| 400 Once the text you are looking for is brought into the buffer, you can | |
| 401 stop doing @kbd{M-y} commands and it will stay there. It's just a copy | |
| 402 of the kill ring entry, so editing it in the buffer does not change | |
| 403 what's in the ring. As long as no new killing is done, the ``last | |
| 404 yank'' pointer remains at the same place in the kill ring, so repeating | |
| 405 @kbd{C-y} will yank another copy of the same previous kill. | |
| 406 | |
| 407 If you know how many @kbd{M-y} commands it would take to find the text | |
| 408 you want, you can yank that text in one step using @kbd{C-y} with a | |
| 409 numeric argument. @kbd{C-y} with an argument restores the text the | |
| 410 specified number of entries back in the kill ring. Thus, @kbd{C-u 2 | |
| 411 C-y} gets the next-to-the-last block of killed text. It is equivalent | |
| 412 to @kbd{C-y M-y}. @kbd{C-y} with a numeric argument starts counting | |
| 413 from the ``last yank'' pointer, and sets the ``last yank'' pointer to | |
| 414 the entry that it yanks. | |
| 415 | |
| 416 @vindex kill-ring-max | |
| 417 The length of the kill ring is controlled by the variable | |
| 418 @code{kill-ring-max}; no more than that many blocks of killed text are | |
| 419 saved. | |
| 420 | |
| 421 @vindex kill-ring | |
| 422 The actual contents of the kill ring are stored in a variable named | |
| 423 @code{kill-ring}; you can view the entire contents of the kill ring with | |
| 424 the command @kbd{C-h v kill-ring}. | |
| 425 | |
| 426 @node Accumulating Text, Rectangles, Yanking, Top | |
| 427 @section Accumulating Text | |
| 428 @findex append-to-buffer | |
| 429 @findex prepend-to-buffer | |
| 430 @findex copy-to-buffer | |
| 431 @findex append-to-file | |
| 432 | |
| 433 @cindex accumulating scattered text | |
| 434 Usually we copy or move text by killing it and yanking it, but there | |
| 435 are other methods convenient for copying one block of text in many | |
| 436 places, or for copying many scattered blocks of text into one place. To | |
| 437 copy one block to many places, store it in a register | |
| 438 (@pxref{Registers}). Here we describe the commands to accumulate | |
| 439 scattered pieces of text into a buffer or into a file. | |
| 440 | |
| 441 @table @kbd | |
| 442 @item M-x append-to-buffer | |
| 443 Append region to contents of specified buffer. | |
| 444 @item M-x prepend-to-buffer | |
| 445 Prepend region to contents of specified buffer. | |
| 446 @item M-x copy-to-buffer | |
| 447 Copy region into specified buffer, deleting that buffer's old contents. | |
| 448 @item M-x insert-buffer | |
| 449 Insert contents of specified buffer into current buffer at point. | |
| 450 @item M-x append-to-file | |
| 451 Append region to contents of specified file, at the end. | |
| 452 @end table | |
| 453 | |
| 454 To accumulate text into a buffer, use @kbd{M-x append-to-buffer}. | |
| 455 This reads a buffer name, then inserts a copy of the region into the | |
| 456 buffer specified. If you specify a nonexistent buffer, | |
| 457 @code{append-to-buffer} creates the buffer. The text is inserted | |
| 458 wherever point is in that buffer. If you have been using the buffer for | |
| 459 editing, the copied text goes into the middle of the text of the buffer, | |
| 460 wherever point happens to be in it. | |
| 461 | |
| 462 Point in that buffer is left at the end of the copied text, so | |
| 463 successive uses of @code{append-to-buffer} accumulate the text in the | |
| 464 specified buffer in the same order as they were copied. Strictly | |
| 465 speaking, @code{append-to-buffer} does not always append to the text | |
| 466 already in the buffer---it appends only if point in that buffer is at the end. | |
| 467 However, if @code{append-to-buffer} is the only command you use to alter | |
| 468 a buffer, then point is always at the end. | |
| 469 | |
| 470 @kbd{M-x prepend-to-buffer} is just like @code{append-to-buffer} | |
| 471 except that point in the other buffer is left before the copied text, so | |
| 472 successive prependings add text in reverse order. @kbd{M-x | |
| 473 copy-to-buffer} is similar except that any existing text in the other | |
| 474 buffer is deleted, so the buffer is left containing just the text newly | |
| 475 copied into it. | |
| 476 | |
| 477 To retrieve the accumulated text from another buffer, use the command | |
| 478 @kbd{M-x insert-buffer}; this too takes @var{buffername} as an argument. | |
| 479 It inserts a copy of the text in buffer @var{buffername} into the | |
| 480 selected buffer. You can alternatively select the other buffer for | |
| 481 editing, then optionally move text from it by killing. @xref{Buffers}, | |
| 482 for background information on buffers. | |
| 483 | |
| 484 Instead of accumulating text within Emacs, in a buffer, you can append | |
| 485 text directly into a file with @kbd{M-x append-to-file}, which takes | |
| 486 @var{filename} as an argument. It adds the text of the region to the end | |
| 487 of the specified file. The file is changed immediately on disk. | |
| 488 | |
| 489 You should use @code{append-to-file} only with files that are | |
| 490 @emph{not} being visited in Emacs. Using it on a file that you are | |
| 491 editing in Emacs would change the file behind Emacs's back, which | |
| 492 can lead to losing some of your editing. | |
| 493 | |
| 494 @node Rectangles, Registers, Accumulating Text, Top | |
| 495 @section Rectangles | |
| 496 @cindex rectangle | |
| 497 @cindex columns (and rectangles) | |
| 498 @cindex killing rectangular areas of text | |
| 499 | |
| 500 The rectangle commands operate on rectangular areas of the text: all | |
| 501 the characters between a certain pair of columns, in a certain range of | |
| 502 lines. Commands are provided to kill rectangles, yank killed rectangles, | |
| 503 clear them out, fill them with blanks or text, or delete them. Rectangle | |
| 504 commands are useful with text in multicolumn formats, and for changing | |
| 505 text into or out of such formats. | |
| 506 | |
| 507 When you must specify a rectangle for a command to work on, you do it | |
| 508 by putting the mark at one corner and point at the opposite corner. The | |
| 509 rectangle thus specified is called the @dfn{region-rectangle} because | |
| 510 you control it in about the same way the region is controlled. But | |
| 511 remember that a given combination of point and mark values can be | |
| 512 interpreted either as a region or as a rectangle, depending on the | |
| 513 command that uses them. | |
| 514 | |
| 515 If point and the mark are in the same column, the rectangle they | |
| 516 delimit is empty. If they are in the same line, the rectangle is one | |
| 517 line high. This asymmetry between lines and columns comes about | |
| 518 because point (and likewise the mark) is between two columns, but within | |
| 519 a line. | |
| 520 | |
| 521 @table @kbd | |
| 522 @item C-x r k | |
| 523 Kill the text of the region-rectangle, saving its contents as the | |
| 524 ``last killed rectangle'' (@code{kill-rectangle}). | |
| 525 @item C-x r d | |
| 526 Delete the text of the region-rectangle (@code{delete-rectangle}). | |
| 527 @item C-x r y | |
| 528 Yank the last killed rectangle with its upper left corner at point | |
| 529 (@code{yank-rectangle}). | |
| 530 @item C-x r o | |
| 531 Insert blank space to fill the space of the region-rectangle | |
| 532 (@code{open-rectangle}). This pushes the previous contents of the | |
| 533 region-rectangle rightward. | |
| 534 @item M-x clear-rectangle | |
| 535 Clear the region-rectangle by replacing its contents with spaces. | |
| 536 @item M-x delete-whitespace-rectangle | |
| 537 Delete whitespace in each of the lines on the specified rectangle, | |
| 538 starting from the left edge column of the rectangle. | |
| 27749 | 539 @item C-x r t @var{string} @key{RET} |
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540 Replace rectangle contents with @var{string} on each line. |
| 25829 | 541 (@code{string-rectangle}). |
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542 @item M-x string-insert-rectangle @key{RET} @var{string} @key{RET} |
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543 Insert @var{string} on each line of the rectangle. |
| 25829 | 544 @end table |
| 545 | |
| 546 The rectangle operations fall into two classes: commands deleting and | |
| 547 inserting rectangles, and commands for blank rectangles. | |
| 548 | |
| 549 @kindex C-x r k | |
| 550 @kindex C-x r d | |
| 551 @findex kill-rectangle | |
| 552 @findex delete-rectangle | |
| 553 There are two ways to get rid of the text in a rectangle: you can | |
| 554 discard the text (delete it) or save it as the ``last killed'' | |
| 555 rectangle. The commands for these two ways are @kbd{C-x r d} | |
| 556 (@code{delete-rectangle}) and @kbd{C-x r k} (@code{kill-rectangle}). In | |
| 557 either case, the portion of each line that falls inside the rectangle's | |
| 558 boundaries is deleted, causing following text (if any) on the line to | |
| 559 move left into the gap. | |
| 560 | |
| 561 Note that ``killing'' a rectangle is not killing in the usual sense; the | |
| 562 rectangle is not stored in the kill ring, but in a special place that | |
| 563 can only record the most recent rectangle killed. This is because yanking | |
| 564 a rectangle is so different from yanking linear text that different yank | |
| 565 commands have to be used and yank-popping is hard to make sense of. | |
| 566 | |
| 567 @kindex C-x r y | |
| 568 @findex yank-rectangle | |
| 569 To yank the last killed rectangle, type @kbd{C-x r y} | |
| 570 (@code{yank-rectangle}). Yanking a rectangle is the opposite of killing | |
| 571 one. Point specifies where to put the rectangle's upper left corner. | |
| 572 The rectangle's first line is inserted there, the rectangle's second | |
| 573 line is inserted at a position one line vertically down, and so on. The | |
| 574 number of lines affected is determined by the height of the saved | |
| 575 rectangle. | |
| 576 | |
| 577 You can convert single-column lists into double-column lists using | |
| 578 rectangle killing and yanking; kill the second half of the list as a | |
| 579 rectangle and then yank it beside the first line of the list. | |
| 580 @xref{Two-Column}, for another way to edit multi-column text. | |
| 581 | |
| 582 You can also copy rectangles into and out of registers with @kbd{C-x r | |
| 583 r @var{r}} and @kbd{C-x r i @var{r}}. @xref{RegRect,,Rectangle | |
| 584 Registers}. | |
| 585 | |
| 586 @kindex C-x r o | |
| 587 @findex open-rectangle | |
| 588 @findex clear-rectangle | |
| 589 There are two commands you can use for making blank rectangles: | |
| 590 @kbd{M-x clear-rectangle} which blanks out existing text, and @kbd{C-x r | |
| 591 o} (@code{open-rectangle}) which inserts a blank rectangle. Clearing a | |
| 592 rectangle is equivalent to deleting it and then inserting a blank | |
| 593 rectangle of the same size. | |
| 594 | |
| 595 @findex delete-whitespace-rectangle | |
| 596 The command @kbd{M-x delete-whitespace-rectangle} deletes horizontal | |
| 597 whitespace starting from a particular column. This applies to each of | |
| 598 the lines in the rectangle, and the column is specified by the left | |
| 599 edge of the rectangle. The right edge of the rectangle does not make | |
| 600 any difference to this command. | |
| 601 | |
| 602 @kindex C-x r t | |
| 603 @findex string-rectangle | |
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604 The command @kbd{C-x r t} (@code{string-rectangle}) replaces the |
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605 contents of a region-rectangle with a string on each line. The |
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606 string's width need not be the same as the width of the rectangle. If |
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607 the string's width is less, the text after the rectangle shifts left; |
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608 if the string is wider than the rectangle, the text after the |
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609 rectangle shifts right. |
| 33805 | 610 |
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611 @findex string-insert-rectangle |
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612 The command @kbd{M-x string-insert-rectangle} is similar to |
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613 @code{string-rectangle}, but inserts the string on each line, |
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614 shifting the original text to the right. |
