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author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> | 1994-03-28 05:41:05 +0000 |
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committer | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> | 1994-03-28 05:41:05 +0000 |
commit | 1eecd97285392ffb354bac6cbd1ffe49313edb40 (patch) | |
tree | 9d43b021230854da623f3f04bcb8b0059b69d710 /lispref/searching.texi | |
parent | 479360d34f344d9de840a2f2fb57c8a6ae400055 (diff) | |
download | emacs-1eecd97285392ffb354bac6cbd1ffe49313edb40.tar.gz |
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diff --git a/lispref/searching.texi b/lispref/searching.texi new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..28625c25bdb --- /dev/null +++ b/lispref/searching.texi @@ -0,0 +1,1254 @@ +@c -*-texinfo-*- +@c This is part of the GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual. +@c Copyright (C) 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994 Free Software Foundation, Inc. +@c See the file elisp.texi for copying conditions. +@setfilename ../info/searching +@node Searching and Matching, Syntax Tables, Text, Top +@chapter Searching and Matching +@cindex searching + + GNU Emacs provides two ways to search through a buffer for specified +text: exact string searches and regular expression searches. After a +regular expression search, you can examine the @dfn{match data} to +determine which text matched the whole regular expression or various +portions of it. + +@menu +* String Search:: Search for an exact match. +* Regular Expressions:: Describing classes of strings. +* Regexp Search:: Searching for a match for a regexp. +* Search and Replace:: Internals of @code{query-replace}. +* Match Data:: Finding out which part of the text matched + various parts of a regexp, after regexp search. +* Searching and Case:: Case-independent or case-significant searching. +* Standard Regexps:: Useful regexps for finding sentences, pages,... +@end menu + + The @samp{skip-chars@dots{}} functions also perform a kind of searching. +@xref{Skipping Characters}. + +@node String Search +@section Searching for Strings +@cindex string search + + These are the primitive functions for searching through the text in a +buffer. They are meant for use in programs, but you may call them +interactively. If you do so, they prompt for the search string; +@var{limit} and @var{noerror} are set to @code{nil}, and @var{repeat} +is set to 1. + +@deffn Command search-forward string &optional limit noerror repeat + This function searches forward from point for an exact match for +@var{string}. If successful, it sets point to the end of the occurrence +found, and returns the new value of point. If no match is found, the +value and side effects depend on @var{noerror} (see below). +@c Emacs 19 feature + + In the following example, point is initially at the beginning of the +line. Then @code{(search-forward "fox")} moves point after the last +letter of @samp{fox}: + +@example +@group +---------- Buffer: foo ---------- +@point{}The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. +---------- Buffer: foo ---------- +@end group + +@group +(search-forward "fox") + @result{} 20 + +---------- Buffer: foo ---------- +The quick brown fox@point{} jumped over the lazy dog. +---------- Buffer: foo ---------- +@end group +@end example + + The argument @var{limit} specifies the upper bound to the search. (It +must be a position in the current buffer.) No match extending after +that position is accepted. If @var{limit} is omitted or @code{nil}, it +defaults to the end of the accessible portion of the buffer. + +@kindex search-failed + What happens when the search fails depends on the value of +@var{noerror}. If @var{noerror} is @code{nil}, a @code{search-failed} +error is signaled. If @var{noerror} is @code{t}, @code{search-forward} +returns @code{nil} and does nothing. If @var{noerror} is neither +@code{nil} nor @code{t}, then @code{search-forward} moves point to the +upper bound and returns @code{nil}. (It would be more consistent now +to return the new position of point in that case, but some programs +may depend on a value of @code{nil}.) + + If @var{repeat} is non-@code{nil}, then the search is repeated that +many times. Point is positioned at the end of the last match. +@end deffn + +@deffn Command search-backward string &optional limit noerror repeat +This function searches backward from point for @var{string}. It is +just like @code{search-forward} except that it searches backwards and +leaves point at the beginning of the match. +@end deffn + +@deffn Command word-search-forward string &optional limit noerror repeat +@cindex word search +This function searches forward from point for a ``word'' match for +@var{string}. If it finds a match, it sets point to the end of the +match found, and returns the new value of point. +@c Emacs 19 feature + +Word matching regards @var{string} as a sequence of words, disregarding +punctuation that separates them. It searches the buffer for the same +sequence of words. Each word must be distinct in the buffer (searching +for the word @samp{ball} does not match the word @samp{balls}), but the +details of punctuation and spacing are ignored (searching for @samp{ball +boy} does match @samp{ball. Boy!}). + +In this example, point is initially at the beginning of the buffer; the +search leaves it between the @samp{y} and the @samp{!}. + +@example +@group +---------- Buffer: foo ---------- +@point{}He said "Please! Find +the ball boy!" +---------- Buffer: foo ---------- +@end group + +@group +(word-search-forward "Please find the ball, boy.") + @result{} 35 + +---------- Buffer: foo ---------- +He said "Please! Find +the ball boy@point{}!" +---------- Buffer: foo ---------- +@end group +@end example + +If @var{limit} is non-@code{nil} (it must be a position in the current +buffer), then it is the upper bound to the search. The match found must +not extend after that position. + +If @var{noerror} is @code{nil}, then @code{word-search-forward} signals +an error if the search fails. If @var{noerror} is @code{t}, then it +returns @code{nil} instead of signaling an error. If @var{noerror} is +neither @code{nil} nor @code{t}, it moves point to @var{limit} (or the +end of the buffer) and returns @code{nil}. + +If @var{repeat} is non-@code{nil}, then the search is repeated that many +times. Point is positioned at the end of the last match. +@end deffn + +@deffn Command word-search-backward string &optional limit noerror repeat +This function searches backward from point for a word match to +@var{string}. This function is just like @code{word-search-forward} +except that it searches backward and normally leaves point at the +beginning of the match. +@end deffn + +@node Regular Expressions +@section Regular Expressions +@cindex regular expression +@cindex regexp + + A @dfn{regular expression} (@dfn{regexp}, for short) is a pattern that +denotes a (possibly infinite) set of strings. Searching for matches for +a regexp is a very powerful operation. This section explains how to write +regexps; the following section says how to search for them. + +@menu +* Syntax of Regexps:: Rules for writing regular expressions. +* Regexp Example:: Illustrates regular expression syntax. +@end menu + +@node Syntax of Regexps +@subsection Syntax of Regular Expressions + + Regular expressions have a syntax in which a few characters are special +constructs and the rest are @dfn{ordinary}. An ordinary character is a +simple regular expression which matches that character and nothing else. +The special characters are @samp{$}, @samp{^}, @samp{.}, @samp{*}, +@samp{+}, @samp{?}, @samp{[}, @samp{]} and @samp{\}; no new special +characters will be defined in the future. Any other character appearing +in a regular expression is ordinary, unless a @samp{\} precedes it. + +For example, @samp{f} is not a special character, so it is ordinary, and +therefore @samp{f} is a regular expression that matches the string +@samp{f} and no other string. (It does @emph{not} match the string +@samp{ff}.) Likewise, @samp{o} is a regular expression that matches +only @samp{o}.@refill + +Any two regular expressions @var{a} and @var{b} can be concatenated. The +result is a regular expression which matches a string if @var{a} matches +some amount of the beginning of that string and @var{b} matches the rest of +the string.@refill + +As a simple example, we can concatenate the regular expressions @samp{f} +and @samp{o} to get the regular expression @samp{fo}, which matches only +the string @samp{fo}. Still trivial. To do something more powerful, you +need to use one of the special characters. Here is a list of them: + +@need 1200 +@table @kbd +@item .@: @r{(Period)} +@cindex @samp{.} in regexp +is a special character that matches any single character except a newline. +Using concatenation, we can make regular expressions like @samp{a.b}, which +matches any three-character string that begins with @samp{a} and ends with +@samp{b}.@refill + +@item * +@cindex @samp{*} in regexp +is not a construct by itself; it is a suffix operator that means to +repeat the preceding regular expression as many times as possible. In +@samp{fo*}, the @samp{*} applies to the @samp{o}, so @samp{fo*} matches +one @samp{f} followed by any number of @samp{o}s. The case of zero +@samp{o}s is allowed: @samp{fo*} does match @samp{f}.@refill + +@samp{*} always applies to the @emph{smallest} possible preceding +expression. Thus, @samp{fo*} has a repeating @samp{o}, not a +repeating @samp{fo}.@refill + +The matcher processes a @samp{*} construct by matching, immediately, +as many repetitions as can be found. Then it continues with the rest +of the pattern. If that fails, backtracking occurs, discarding some +of the matches of the @samp{*}-modified construct in case that makes +it possible to match the rest of the pattern. For example, in matching +@samp{ca*ar} against the string @samp{caaar}, the @samp{a*} first +tries to match all three @samp{a}s; but the rest of the pattern is +@samp{ar} and there is only @samp{r} left to match, so this try fails. +The next alternative is for @samp{a*} to match only two @samp{a}s. +With this choice, the rest of the regexp matches successfully.@refill + +@item + +@cindex @samp{+} in regexp +is a suffix operator similar to @samp{*} except that the preceding +expression must match at least once. So, for example, @samp{ca+r} +matches the strings @samp{car} and @samp{caaaar} but not the string +@samp{cr}, whereas @samp{ca*r} matches all three strings. + +@item ? +@cindex @samp{?} in regexp +is a suffix operator similar to @samp{*} except that the preceding +expression can match either once or not at all. For example, +@samp{ca?r} matches @samp{car} or @samp{cr}, but does not match anyhing +else. + +@item [ @dots{} ] +@cindex character set (in regexp) +@cindex @samp{[} in regexp +@cindex @samp{]} in regexp +@samp{[} begins a @dfn{character set}, which is terminated by a +@samp{]}. In the simplest case, the characters between the two brackets +form the set. Thus, @samp{[ad]} matches either one @samp{a} or one +@samp{d}, and @samp{[ad]*} matches any string composed of just @samp{a}s +and @samp{d}s (including the empty string), from which it follows that +@samp{c[ad]*r} matches @samp{cr}, @samp{car}, @samp{cdr}, +@samp{caddaar}, etc.@refill + +The usual regular expression special characters are not special inside a +character set. A completely different set of special characters exists +inside character sets: @samp{]}, @samp{-} and @samp{^}.@refill + +@samp{-} is used for ranges of characters. To write a range, write two +characters with a @samp{-} between them. Thus, @samp{[a-z]} matches any +lower case letter. Ranges may be intermixed freely with individual +characters, as in @samp{[a-z$%.]}, which matches any lower case letter +or @samp{$}, @samp{%} or a period.@refill + +To include a @samp{]} in a character set, make it the first character. +For example, @samp{[]a]} matches @samp{]} or @samp{a}. To include a +@samp{-}, write @samp{-} as the first character in the set, or put +immediately after a range. (You can replace one individual character +@var{c} with the range @samp{@var{c}-@var{c}} to make a place to put the +@samp{-}). There is no way to write a set containing just @samp{-} and +@samp{]}. + +To include @samp{^} in a set, put it anywhere but at the beginning of +the set. + +@item [^ @dots{} ] +@cindex @samp{^} in regexp +@samp{[^} begins a @dfn{complement character set}, which matches any +character except the ones specified. Thus, @samp{[^a-z0-9A-Z]} +matches all characters @emph{except} letters and digits.@refill + +@samp{^} is not special in a character set unless it is the first +character. The character following the @samp{^} is treated as if it +were first (thus, @samp{-} and @samp{]} are not special there). + +Note that a complement character set can match a newline, unless +newline is mentioned as one of the characters not to match. + +@item ^ +@cindex @samp{^} in regexp +@cindex beginning of line in regexp +is a special character that matches the empty string, but only at +the beginning of a line in the text being matched. Otherwise it fails +to match anything. Thus, @samp{^foo} matches a @samp{foo} which occurs +at the beginning of a line. + +When matching a string, @samp{^} matches at the beginning of the string +or after a newline character @samp{\n}. + +@item $ +@cindex @samp{$} in regexp +is similar to @samp{^} but matches only at the end of a line. Thus, +@samp{x+$} matches a string of one @samp{x} or more at the end of a line. + +When matching a string, @samp{$} matches at the end of the string +or before a newline character @samp{\n}. + +@item \ +@cindex @samp{\} in regexp +has two functions: it quotes the special characters (including +@samp{\}), and it introduces additional special constructs. + +Because @samp{\} quotes special characters, @samp{\$} is a regular +expression which matches only @samp{$}, and @samp{\[} is a regular +expression which matches only @samp{[}, and so on. + +Note that @samp{\} also has special meaning in the read syntax of Lisp +strings (@pxref{String Type}), and must be quoted with @samp{\}. For +example, the regular expression that matches the @samp{\} character is +@samp{\\}. To write a Lisp string that contains the characters +@samp{\\}, Lisp syntax requires you to quote each @samp{\} with another +@samp{\}. Therefore, the read syntax for a regular expression matching +@samp{\} is @code{"\\\\"}.@refill +@end table + +@strong{Please note:} for historical compatibility, special characters +are treated as ordinary ones if they are in contexts where their special +meanings make no sense. For example, @samp{*foo} treats @samp{*} as +ordinary since there is no preceding expression on which the @samp{*} +can act. It is poor practice to depend on this behavior; better to +quote the special character anyway, regardless of where it +appears.@refill + +For the most part, @samp{\} followed by any character matches only +that character. However, there are several exceptions: characters +which, when preceded by @samp{\}, are special constructs. Such +characters are always ordinary when encountered on their own. Here +is a table of @samp{\} constructs: + +@table @kbd +@item \| +@cindex @samp{|} in regexp +@cindex regexp alternative +specifies an alternative. +Two regular expressions @var{a} and @var{b} with @samp{\|} in +between form an expression that matches anything that either @var{a} or +@var{b} matches.@refill + +Thus, @samp{foo\|bar} matches either @samp{foo} or @samp{bar} +but no other string.@refill + +@samp{\|} applies to the largest possible surrounding expressions. Only a +surrounding @samp{\( @dots{} \)} grouping can limit the grouping power of +@samp{\|}.@refill + +Full backtracking capability exists to handle multiple uses of @samp{\|}. + +@item \( @dots{} \) +@cindex @samp{(} in regexp +@cindex @samp{)} in regexp +@cindex regexp grouping +is a grouping construct that serves three purposes: + +@enumerate +@item +To enclose a set of @samp{\|} alternatives for other operations. +Thus, @samp{\(foo\|bar\)x} matches either @samp{foox} or @samp{barx}. + +@item +To enclose an expression for a suffix operator such as @samp{*} to act +on. Thus, @samp{ba\(na\)*} matches @samp{bananana}, etc., with any +(zero or more) number of @samp{na} strings.@refill + +@item +To record a matched substring for future reference. +@end enumerate + +This last application is not a consequence of the idea of a +parenthetical grouping; it is a separate feature which happens to be +assigned as a second meaning to the same @samp{\( @dots{} \)} construct +because there is no conflict in practice between the two meanings. +Here is an explanation of this feature: + +@item \@var{digit} +matches the same text which matched the @var{digit}th occurrence of a +@samp{\( @dots{} \)} construct. + +In other words, after the end of a @samp{\( @dots{} \)} construct. the +matcher remembers the beginning and end of the text matched by that +construct. Then, later on in the regular expression, you can use +@samp{\} followed by @var{digit} to match that same text, whatever it +may have been. + +The strings matching the first nine @samp{\( @dots{} \)} constructs +appearing in a regular expression are assigned numbers 1 through 9 in +the order that the open parentheses appear in the regular expression. +So you can use @samp{\1} through @samp{\9} to refer to the text matched +by the corresponding @samp{\( @dots{} \)} constructs. + +For example, @samp{\(.*\)\1} matches any newline-free string that is +composed of two identical halves. The @samp{\(.*\)} matches the first +half, which may be anything, but the @samp{\1} that follows must match +the same exact text. + +@item \w +@cindex @samp{\w} in regexp +matches any word-constituent character. The editor syntax table +determines which characters these are. @xref{Syntax Tables}. + +@item \W +@cindex @samp{\W} in regexp +matches any character that is not a word-constituent. + +@item \s@var{code} +@cindex @samp{\s} in regexp +matches any character whose syntax is @var{code}. Here @var{code} is a +character which represents a syntax code: thus, @samp{w} for word +constituent, @samp{-} for whitespace, @samp{(} for open parenthesis, +etc. @xref{Syntax Tables}, for a list of syntax codes and the +characters that stand for them. + +@item \S@var{code} +@cindex @samp{\S} in regexp +matches any character whose syntax is not @var{code}. +@end table + + These regular expression constructs match the empty string---that is, +they don't use up any characters---but whether they match depends on the +context. + +@table @kbd +@item \` +@cindex @samp{\`} in regexp +matches the empty string, but only at the beginning +of the buffer or string being matched against. + +@item \' +@cindex @samp{\'} in regexp +matches the empty string, but only at the end of +the buffer or string being matched against. + +@item \= +@cindex @samp{\=} in regexp +matches the empty string, but only at point. +(This construct is not defined when matching against a string.) + +@item \b +@cindex @samp{\b} in regexp +matches the empty string, but only at the beginning or +end of a word. Thus, @samp{\bfoo\b} matches any occurrence of +@samp{foo} as a separate word. @samp{\bballs?\b} matches +@samp{ball} or @samp{balls} as a separate word.@refill + +@item \B +@cindex @samp{\B} in regexp +matches the empty string, but @emph{not} at the beginning or +end of a word. + +@item \< +@cindex @samp{\<} in regexp +matches the empty string, but only at the beginning of a word. + +@item \> +@cindex @samp{\>} in regexp +matches the empty string, but only at the end of a word. +@end table + +@kindex invalid-regexp + Not every string is a valid regular expression. For example, a string +with unbalanced square brackets is invalid (with a few exceptions, such +as @samp{[]]}, and so is a string that ends with a single @samp{\}. If +an invalid regular expression is passed to any of the search functions, +an @code{invalid-regexp} error is signaled. + +@defun regexp-quote string +This function returns a regular expression string that matches exactly +@var{string} and nothing else. This allows you to request an exact +string match when calling a function that wants a regular expression. + +@example +@group +(regexp-quote "^The cat$") + @result{} "\\^The cat\\$" +@end group +@end example + +One use of @code{regexp-quote} is to combine an exact string match with +context described as a regular expression. For example, this searches +for the string which is the value of @code{string}, surrounded by +whitespace: + +@example +@group +(re-search-forward + (concat "\\s " (regexp-quote string) "\\s ")) +@end group +@end example +@end defun + +@node Regexp Example +@comment node-name, next, previous, up +@subsection Complex Regexp Example + + Here is a complicated regexp, used by Emacs to recognize the end of a +sentence together with any whitespace that follows. It is the value of +the variable @code{sentence-end}. + + First, we show the regexp as a string in Lisp syntax to distinguish +spaces from tab characters. The string constant begins and ends with a +double-quote. @samp{\"} stands for a double-quote as part of the +string, @samp{\\} for a backslash as part of the string, @samp{\t} for a +tab and @samp{\n} for a newline. + +@example +"[.?!][]\"')@}]*\\($\\| $\\|\t\\| \\)[ \t\n]*" +@end example + + In contrast, if you evaluate the variable @code{sentence-end}, you +will see the following: + +@example +@group +sentence-end +@result{} +"[.?!][]\"')@}]*\\($\\| $\\| \\| \\)[ +]*" +@end group +@end example + +@noindent +In this output, tab and newline appear as themselves. + + This regular expression contains four parts in succession and can be +deciphered as follows: + +@table @code +@item [.?!] +The first part of the pattern consists of three characters, a period, a +question mark and an exclamation mark, within square brackets. The +match must begin with one of these three characters. + +@item []\"')@}]* +The second part of the pattern matches any closing braces and quotation +marks, zero or more of them, that may follow the period, question mark +or exclamation mark. The @code{\"} is Lisp syntax for a double-quote in +a string. The @samp{*} at the end indicates that the immediately +preceding regular expression (a character set, in this case) may be +repeated zero or more times. + +@item \\($\\|@ \\|\t\\|@ @ \\) +The third part of the pattern matches the whitespace that follows the +end of a sentence: the end of a line, or a tab, or two spaces. The +double backslashes mark the parentheses and vertical bars as regular +expression syntax; the parentheses mark the group and the vertical bars +separate alternatives. The dollar sign is used to match the end of a +line. + +@item [ \t\n]* +Finally, the last part of the pattern matches any additional whitespace +beyond the minimum needed to end a sentence. +@end table + +@node Regexp Search +@section Regular Expression Searching +@cindex regular expression searching +@cindex regexp searching +@cindex searching for regexp + + In GNU Emacs, you can search for the next match for a regexp either +incrementally or not. For incremental search commands, see @ref{Regexp +Search, , Regular Expression Search, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}. Here +we describe only the search functions useful in programs. The principal +one is @code{re-search-forward}. + +@deffn Command re-search-forward regexp &optional limit noerror repeat +This function searches forward in the current buffer for a string of +text that is matched by the regular expression @var{regexp}. The +function skips over any amount of text that is not matched by +@var{regexp}, and leaves point at the end of the first match found. +It returns the new value of point. + +If @var{limit} is non-@code{nil} (it must be a position in the current +buffer), then it is the upper bound to the search. No match extending +after that position is accepted. + +What happens when the search fails depends on the value of +@var{noerror}. If @var{noerror} is @code{nil}, a @code{search-failed} +error is signaled. If @var{noerror} is @code{t}, +@code{re-search-forward} does nothing and returns @code{nil}. If +@var{noerror} is neither @code{nil} nor @code{t}, then +@code{re-search-forward} moves point to @var{limit} (or the end of the +buffer) and returns @code{nil}. + +If @var{repeat} is supplied (it must be a positive number), then the +search is repeated that many times (each time starting at the end of the +previous time's match). If these successive searches succeed, the +function succeeds, moving point and returning its new value. Otherwise +the search fails. + +In the following example, point is initially before the @samp{T}. +Evaluating the search call moves point to the end of that line (between +the @samp{t} of @samp{hat} and the newline). + +@example +@group +---------- Buffer: foo ---------- +I read "@point{}The cat in the hat +comes back" twice. +---------- Buffer: foo ---------- +@end group + +@group +(re-search-forward "[a-z]+" nil t 5) + @result{} 27 + +---------- Buffer: foo ---------- +I read "The cat in the hat@point{} +comes back" twice. +---------- Buffer: foo ---------- +@end group +@end example +@end deffn + +@deffn Command re-search-backward regexp &optional limit noerror repeat +This function searches backward in the current buffer for a string of +text that is matched by the regular expression @var{regexp}, leaving +point at the beginning of the first text found. + +This function is analogous to @code{re-search-forward}, but they are +not simple mirror images. @code{re-search-forward} finds the match +whose beginning is as close as possible. If @code{re-search-backward} +were a perfect mirror image, it would find the match whose end is as +close as possible. However, in fact it finds the match whose beginning +is as close as possible. The reason is that matching a regular +expression at a given spot always works from beginning to end, and is +done at a specified beginning position. + +A true mirror-image of @code{re-search-forward} would require a special +feature for matching regexps from end to beginning. It's not worth the +trouble of implementing that. +@end deffn + +@defun string-match regexp string &optional start +This function returns the index of the start of the first match for +the regular expression @var{regexp} in @var{string}, or @code{nil} if +there is no match. If @var{start} is non-@code{nil}, the search starts +at that index in @var{string}. + +For example, + +@example +@group +(string-match + "quick" "The quick brown fox jumped quickly.") + @result{} 4 +@end group +@group +(string-match + "quick" "The quick brown fox jumped quickly." 8) + @result{} 27 +@end group +@end example + +@noindent +The index of the first character of the +string is 0, the index of the second character is 1, and so on. + +After this function returns, the index of the first character beyond +the match is available as @code{(match-end 0)}. @xref{Match Data}. + +@example +@group +(string-match + "quick" "The quick brown fox jumped quickly." 8) + @result{} 27 +@end group + +@group +(match-end 0) + @result{} 32 +@end group +@end example +@end defun + +@defun looking-at regexp +This function determines whether the text in the current buffer directly +following point matches the regular expression @var{regexp}. ``Directly +following'' means precisely that: the search is ``anchored'' and it can +succeed only starting with the first character following point. The +result is @code{t} if so, @code{nil} otherwise. + +This function does not move point, but it updates the match data, which +you can access using @code{match-beginning} and @code{match-end}. +@xref{Match Data}. + +In this example, point is located directly before the @samp{T}. If it +were anywhere else, the result would be @code{nil}. + +@example +@group +---------- Buffer: foo ---------- +I read "@point{}The cat in the hat +comes back" twice. +---------- Buffer: foo ---------- + +(looking-at "The cat in the hat$") + @result{} t +@end group +@end example +@end defun + +@ignore +@deffn Command delete-matching-lines regexp +This function is identical to @code{delete-non-matching-lines}, save +that it deletes what @code{delete-non-matching-lines} keeps. + +In the example below, point is located on the first line of text. + +@example +@group +---------- Buffer: foo ---------- +We hold these truths +to be self-evident, +that all men are created +equal, and that they are +---------- Buffer: foo ---------- +@end group + +@group +(delete-matching-lines "the") + @result{} nil + +---------- Buffer: foo ---------- +to be self-evident, +that all men are created +---------- Buffer: foo ---------- +@end group +@end example +@end deffn + +@deffn Command flush-lines regexp +This function is the same as @code{delete-matching-lines}. +@end deffn + +@defun delete-non-matching-lines regexp +This function deletes all lines following point which don't +contain a match for the regular expression @var{regexp}. +@end defun + +@deffn Command keep-lines regexp +This function is the same as @code{delete-non-matching-lines}. +@end deffn + +@deffn Command how-many regexp +This function counts the number of matches for @var{regexp} there are in +the current buffer following point. It prints this number in +the echo area, returning the string printed. +@end deffn + +@deffn Command count-matches regexp +This function is a synonym of @code{how-many}. +@end deffn + +@deffn Command list-matching-lines regexp nlines +This function is a synonym of @code{occur}. +Show all lines following point containing a match for @var{regexp}. +Display each line with @var{nlines} lines before and after, +or @code{-}@var{nlines} before if @var{nlines} is negative. +@var{nlines} defaults to @code{list-matching-lines-default-context-lines}. +Interactively it is the prefix arg. + +The lines are shown in a buffer named @samp{*Occur*}. +It serves as a menu to find any of the occurrences in this buffer. +@kbd{C-h m} (@code{describe-mode} in that buffer gives help. +@end deffn + +@defopt list-matching-lines-default-context-lines +Default value is 0. +Default number of context lines to include around a @code{list-matching-lines} +match. A negative number means to include that many lines before the match. +A positive number means to include that many lines both before and after. +@end defopt +@end ignore + +@node Search and Replace +@section Search and Replace +@cindex replacement + +@defun perform-replace from-string replacements query-flag regexp-flag delimited-flag &optional repeat-count map +This function is the guts of @code{query-replace} and related commands. +It searches for occurrences of @var{from-string} and replaces some or +all of them. If @var{query-flag} is @code{nil}, it replaces all +occurrences; otherwise, it asks the user what to do about each one. + +If @var{regexp-flag} is non-@code{nil}, then @var{from-string} is +considered a regular expression; otherwise, it must match literally. If +@var{delimited-flag} is non-@code{nil}, then only replacements +surrounded by word boundaries are considered. + +The argument @var{replacements} specifies what to replace occurrences +with. If it is a string, that string is used. It can also be a list of +strings, to be used in cyclic order. + +If @var{repeat-count} is non-@code{nil}, it should be an integer, the +number of occurrences to consider. In this case, @code{perform-replace} +returns after considering that many occurrences. + +Normally, the keymap @code{query-replace-map} defines the possible user +responses. The argument @var{map}, if non-@code{nil}, is a keymap to +use instead of @code{query-replace-map}. +@end defun + +@defvar query-replace-map +This variable holds a special keymap that defines the valid user +responses for @code{query-replace} and related functions, as well as +@code{y-or-n-p} and @code{map-y-or-n-p}. It is unusual in two ways: + +@itemize @bullet +@item +The ``key bindings'' are not commands, just symbols that are meaningful +to the functions that use this map. + +@item +Prefix keys are not supported; each key binding must be for a single event +key sequence. This is because the functions don't use read key sequence to +get the input; instead, they read a single event and look it up ``by hand.'' +@end itemize +@end defvar + +Here are the meaningful ``bindings'' for @code{query-replace-map}. +Several of them are meaningful only for @code{query-replace} and +friends. + +@table @code +@item act +Do take the action being considered---in other words, ``yes.'' + +@item skip +Do not take action for this question---in other words, ``no.'' + +@item exit +Answer this question ``no,'' and don't ask any more. + +@item act-and-exit +Answer this question ``yes,'' and don't ask any more. + +@item act-and-show +Answer this question ``yes,'' but show the results---don't advance yet +to the next question. + +@item automatic +Answer this question and all subsequent questions in the series with +``yes,'' without further user interaction. + +@item backup +Move back to the previous place that a question was asked about. + +@item edit +Enter a recursive edit to deal with this question---instead of any +other action that would normally be taken. + +@item delete-and-edit +Delete the text being considered, then enter a recursive edit to replace +it. + +@item recenter +Redisplay and center the window, then ask the same question again. + +@item quit +Perform a quit right away. Only @code{y-or-n-p} and related functions +use this answer. + +@item help +Display some help, then ask again. +@end table + +@node Match Data +@section The Match Data +@cindex match data + + Emacs keeps track of the positions of the start and end of segments of +text found during a regular expression search. This means, for example, +that you can search for a complex pattern, such as a date in an Rmail +message, and then extract parts of the match under control of the +pattern. + + Because the match data normally describe the most recent search only, +you must be careful not to do another search inadvertently between the +search you wish to refer back to and the use of the match data. If you +can't avoid another intervening search, you must save and restore the +match data around it, to prevent it from being overwritten. + +@menu +* Simple Match Data:: Accessing single items of match data, + such as where a particular subexpression started. +* Replacing Match:: Replacing a substring that was matched. +* Entire Match Data:: Accessing the entire match data at once, as a list. +* Saving Match Data:: Saving and restoring the match data. +@end menu + +@node Simple Match Data +@subsection Simple Match Data Access + + This section explains how to use the match data to find the starting +point or ending point of the text that was matched by a particular +search, or by a particular parenthetical subexpression of a regular +expression. + +@defun match-beginning count +This function returns the position of the start of text matched by the +last regular expression searched for, or a subexpression of it. + +The argument @var{count}, a number, specifies a subexpression whose +start position is the value. If @var{count} is zero, then the value is +the position of the text matched by the whole regexp. If @var{count} is +greater than zero, then the value is the position of the beginning of +the text matched by the @var{count}th subexpression. + +Subexpressions of a regular expression are those expressions grouped +inside of parentheses, @samp{\(@dots{}\)}. The @var{count}th +subexpression is found by counting occurrences of @samp{\(} from the +beginning of the whole regular expression. The first subexpression is +numbered 1, the second 2, and so on. + +The value is @code{nil} for a parenthetical grouping inside of a +@samp{\|} alternative that wasn't used in the match. +@end defun + +@defun match-end count +This function returns the position of the end of the text that matched +the last regular expression searched for, or a subexpression of it. +This function is otherwise similar to @code{match-beginning}. +@end defun + + Here is an example of using the match data, with a comment showing the +positions within the text: + +@example +@group +(string-match "\\(qu\\)\\(ick\\)" + "The quick fox jumped quickly.") + ;0123456789 + @result{} 4 +@end group + +@group +(match-beginning 1) ; @r{The beginning of the match} + @result{} 4 ; @r{with @samp{qu} is at index 4.} +@end group + +@group +(match-beginning 2) ; @r{The beginning of the match} + @result{} 6 ; @r{with @samp{ick} is at index 6.} +@end group + +@group +(match-end 1) ; @r{The end of the match} + @result{} 6 ; @r{with @samp{qu} is at index 6.} + +(match-end 2) ; @r{The end of the match} + @result{} 9 ; @r{with @samp{ick} is at index 9.} +@end group +@end example + + Here is another example. Point is initially located at the beginning +of the line. Searching moves point to between the space and the word +@samp{in}. The beginning of the entire match is at the 9th character of +the buffer (@samp{T}), and the beginning of the match for the first +subexpression is at the 13th character (@samp{c}). + +@example +@group +(list + (re-search-forward "The \\(cat \\)") + (match-beginning 0) + (match-beginning 1)) + @result{} (t 9 13) +@end group + +@group +---------- Buffer: foo ---------- +I read "The cat @point{}in the hat comes back" twice. + ^ ^ + 9 13 +---------- Buffer: foo ---------- +@end group +@end example + +@noindent +(In this case, the index returned is a buffer position; the first +character of the buffer counts as 1.) + +@node Replacing Match +@subsection Replacing the Text That Matched + + This function replaces the text matched by the last search with +@var{replacement}. + +@cindex case in replacements +@defun replace-match replacement &optional fixedcase literal +This function replaces the buffer text matched by the last search, with +@var{replacement}. It applies only to buffers; you can't use +@code{replace-match} to replace a substring found with +@code{string-match}. + +If @var{fixedcase} is non-@code{nil}, then the case of the replacement +text is not changed; otherwise, the replacement text is converted to a +different case depending upon the capitalization of the text to be +replaced. If the original text is all upper case, the replacement text +is converted to upper case, except when all of the words in the original +text are only one character long. In that event, the replacement text +is capitalized. If @emph{any} of the words in the original text is +capitalized, then all of the words in the replacement text are +capitalized. + +If @var{literal} is non-@code{nil}, then @var{replacement} is inserted +exactly as it is, the only alterations being case changes as needed. +If it is @code{nil} (the default), then the character @samp{\} is treated +specially. If a @samp{\} appears in @var{replacement}, then it must be +part of one of the following sequences: + +@table @asis +@item @samp{\&} +@cindex @samp{&} in replacement +@samp{\&} stands for the entire text being replaced. + +@item @samp{\@var{n}} +@cindex @samp{\@var{n}} in replacement +@samp{\@var{n}} stands for the text that matched the @var{n}th +subexpression in the original regexp. Subexpressions are those +expressions grouped inside of @samp{\(@dots{}\)}. @var{n} is a digit. + +@item @samp{\\} +@cindex @samp{\} in replacement +@samp{\\} stands for a single @samp{\} in the replacement text. +@end table + +@code{replace-match} leaves point at the end of the replacement text, +and returns @code{t}. +@end defun + +@node Entire Match Data +@subsection Accessing the Entire Match Data + + The functions @code{match-data} and @code{set-match-data} read or +write the entire match data, all at once. + +@defun match-data +This function returns a newly constructed list containing all the +information on what text the last search matched. Element zero is the +position of the beginning of the match for the whole expression; element +one is the position of the end of the match for the expression. The +next two elements are the positions of the beginning and end of the +match for the first subexpression, and so on. In general, element +@ifinfo +number 2@var{n} +@end ifinfo +@tex +number {\mathsurround=0pt $2n$} +@end tex +corresponds to @code{(match-beginning @var{n})}; and +element +@ifinfo +number 2@var{n} + 1 +@end ifinfo +@tex +number {\mathsurround=0pt $2n+1$} +@end tex +corresponds to @code{(match-end @var{n})}. + +All the elements are markers or @code{nil} if matching was done on a +buffer, and all are integers or @code{nil} if matching was done on a +string with @code{string-match}. (In Emacs 18 and earlier versions, +markers were used even for matching on a string, except in the case +of the integer 0.) + +As always, there must be no possibility of intervening searches between +the call to a search function and the call to @code{match-data} that is +intended to access the match data for that search. + +@example +@group +(match-data) + @result{} (#<marker at 9 in foo> + #<marker at 17 in foo> + #<marker at 13 in foo> + #<marker at 17 in foo>) +@end group +@end example +@end defun + +@defun set-match-data match-list +This function sets the match data from the elements of @var{match-list}, +which should be a list that was the value of a previous call to +@code{match-data}. + +If @var{match-list} refers to a buffer that doesn't exist, you don't get +an error; that sets the match data in a meaningless but harmless way. + +@findex store-match-data +@code{store-match-data} is an alias for @code{set-match-data}. +@end defun + +@node Saving Match Data +@subsection Saving and Restoring the Match Data + + All asynchronous process functions (filters and sentinels) and +functions that use @code{recursive-edit} should save and restore the +match data if they do a search or if they let the user type arbitrary +commands. Saving the match data is useful in other cases as +well---whenever you want to access the match data resulting from an +earlier search, notwithstanding another intervening search. + + This example shows the problem that can arise if you fail to +attend to this requirement: + +@example +@group +(re-search-forward "The \\(cat \\)") + @result{} 48 +(foo) ; @r{Perhaps @code{foo} does} + ; @r{more searching.} +(match-end 0) + @result{} 61 ; @r{Unexpected result---not 48!} +@end group +@end example + + In Emacs versions 19 and later, you can save and restore the match +data with @code{save-match-data}: + +@defspec save-match-data body@dots{} +This special form executes @var{body}, saving and restoring the match +data around it. This is useful if you wish to do a search without +altering the match data that resulted from an earlier search. +@end defspec + + You can use @code{set-match-data} together with @code{match-data} to +imitate the effect of the special form @code{save-match-data}. This is +useful for writing code that can run in Emacs 18. Here is how: + +@example +@group +(let ((data (match-data))) + (unwind-protect + @dots{} ; @r{May change the original match data.} + (set-match-data data))) +@end group +@end example + +@ignore + Here is a function which restores the match data provided the buffer +associated with it still exists. + +@smallexample +@group +(defun restore-match-data (data) +@c It is incorrect to split the first line of a doc string. +@c If there's a problem here, it should be solved in some other way. + "Restore the match data DATA unless the buffer is missing." + (catch 'foo + (let ((d data)) +@end group + (while d + (and (car d) + (null (marker-buffer (car d))) +@group + ;; @file{match-data} @r{buffer is deleted.} + (throw 'foo nil)) + (setq d (cdr d))) + (set-match-data data)))) +@end group +@end smallexample +@end ignore + +@node Searching and Case +@section Searching and Case +@cindex searching and case + + By default, searches in Emacs ignore the case of the text they are +searching through; if you specify searching for @samp{FOO}, then +@samp{Foo} or @samp{foo} is also considered a match. Regexps, and in +particular character sets, are included: thus, @samp{[aB]} would match +@samp{a} or @samp{A} or @samp{b} or @samp{B}. + + If you do not want this feature, set the variable +@code{case-fold-search} to @code{nil}. Then all letters must match +exactly, including case. This is a per-buffer-local variable; altering +the variable affects only the current buffer. (@xref{Intro to +Buffer-Local}.) Alternatively, you may change the value of +@code{default-case-fold-search}, which is the default value of +@code{case-fold-search} for buffers that do not override it. + + Note that the user-level incremental search feature handles case +distinctions differently. When given a lower case letter, it looks for +a match of either case, but when given an upper case letter, it looks +for an upper case letter only. But this has nothing to do with the +searching functions Lisp functions use. + +@defopt case-replace +This variable determines whether @code{query-replace} should preserve +case in replacements. If the variable is @code{nil}, then +@code{replace-match} should not try to convert case. +@end defopt + +@defopt case-fold-search +This buffer-local variable determines whether searches should ignore +case. If the variable is @code{nil} they do not ignore case; otherwise +they do ignore case. +@end defopt + +@defvar default-case-fold-search +The value of this variable is the default value for +@code{case-fold-search} in buffers that do not override it. This is the +same as @code{(default-value 'case-fold-search)}. +@end defvar + +@node Standard Regexps +@section Standard Regular Expressions Used in Editing +@cindex regexps used standardly in editing +@cindex standard regexps used in editing + + This section describes some variables that hold regular expressions +used for certain purposes in editing: + +@defvar page-delimiter +This is the regexp describing line-beginnings that separate pages. The +default value is @code{"^\014"} (i.e., @code{"^^L"} or @code{"^\C-l"}). +@end defvar + +@defvar paragraph-separate +This is the regular expression for recognizing the beginning of a line +that separates paragraphs. (If you change this, you may have to +change @code{paragraph-start} also.) The default value is @code{"^[ +\t\f]*$"}, which is a line that consists entirely of spaces, tabs, and +form feeds. +@end defvar + +@defvar paragraph-start +This is the regular expression for recognizing the beginning of a line +that starts @emph{or} separates paragraphs. The default value is +@code{"^[ \t\n\f]"}, which matches a line starting with a space, tab, +newline, or form feed. +@end defvar + +@defvar sentence-end +This is the regular expression describing the end of a sentence. (All +paragraph boundaries also end sentences, regardless.) The default value +is: + +@example +"[.?!][]\"')@}]*\\($\\|\t\\| \\)[ \t\n]*" +@end example + +This means a period, question mark or exclamation mark, followed by a +closing brace, followed by tabs, spaces or new lines. + +For a detailed explanation of this regular expression, see @ref{Regexp +Example}. +@end defvar |