An abbreviation or abbrev is a string of characters that may be expanded to a longer string. The user can insert the abbrev string and find it replaced automatically with the expansion of the abbrev. This saves typing.
The set of abbrevs currently in effect is recorded in an abbrev table. Each buffer has a local abbrev table, but normally all buffers in the same major mode share one abbrev table. There is also a global abbrev table. Normally both are used.
An abbrev table is represented as an obarray containing a symbol for each abbreviation. The symbol's name is the abbreviation; its value is the expansion; its function definition is the hook function to do the expansion (see section Defining Abbrevs); its property list cell contains the use count, the number of times the abbreviation has been expanded. Because these symbols are not interned in the usual obarray, they will never appear as the result of reading a Lisp expression; in fact, normally they are never used except by the code that handles abbrevs. Therefore, it is safe to use them in an extremely nonstandard way. See section Creating and Interning Symbols.
For the user-level commands for abbrevs, see section `Abbrev Mode' in The GNU Emacs Manual.
Abbrev mode is a minor mode controlled by the value of the variable
abbrev-mode.
nil value of this variable turns on the automatic expansion
of abbrevs when their abbreviations are inserted into a buffer.
If the value is nil, abbrevs may be defined, but they are not
expanded automatically.
This variable automatically becomes buffer-local when set in any fashion.
abbrev-mode for buffers that do not override it.
This is the same as (default-value 'abbrev-mode).
This section describes how to create and manipulate abbrev tables.
nil.
(abbrevname expansion hook
usecount). The return value is always nil.
define-abbrev-table adds the new abbrev table name to this list.
nil.
If human is non-nil, the description is human-oriented.
Otherwise the description is a Lisp expression--a call to
define-abbrev-table that would define name exactly as it
is currently defined.
These functions define an abbrev in a specified abbrev table.
define-abbrev is the low-level basic function, while
add-abbrev is used by commands that ask for information from the
user.
"global" or "mode-specific"); this is used in prompting
the user. The argument arg is the number of words in the
expansion.
The return value is the symbol that internally represents the new
abbrev, or nil if the user declines to confirm redefining an
existing abbrev.
The argument name should be a string. The argument
expansion is normally the desired expansion (a string), or
nil to undefine the abbrev. If it is anything but a string or
nil, then the abbreviation "expands" solely by running
hook.
The argument hook is a function or nil. If hook is
non-nil, then it is called with no arguments after the abbrev is
replaced with expansion; point is located at the end of
expansion when hook is called.
The use count of the abbrev is initialized to zero.
nil, it means that the user plans to use
global abbrevs only. This tells the commands that define mode-specific
abbrevs to define global ones instead. This variable does not alter the
behavior of the functions in this section; it is examined by their
callers.
A file of saved abbrev definitions is actually a file of Lisp code.
The abbrevs are saved in the form of a Lisp program to define the same
abbrev tables with the same contents. Therefore, you can load the file
with load (see section How Programs Do Loading). However, the
function quietly-read-abbrev-file is provided as a more
convenient interface.
User-level facilities such as save-some-buffers can save
abbrevs in a file automatically, under the control of variables
described here.
write-abbrev-file. If filename is
nil, the file specified in abbrev-file-name is used.
save-abbrevs is set to t so that changes will be saved.
This function does not display any messages. It returns nil.
nil value for save-abbrev means that Emacs should
save abbrevs when files are saved. abbrev-file-name specifies
the file to save the abbrevs in.
nil by defining or altering any
abbrevs. This serves as a flag for various Emacs commands to offer to
save your abbrevs.
nil.
Abbrevs are usually expanded by certain interactive commands,
including self-insert-command. This section describes the
subroutines used in writing such commands, as well as the variables they
use for communication.
nil if that abbrev is not
defined. The optional second argument table is the abbrev table
to look it up in. If table is nil, this function tries
first the current buffer's local abbrev table, and second the global
abbrev table.
abbrev-symbol.
t if it did expansion, nil otherwise.
expand-abbrev will use the text from here to point (where it is
then) as the abbrev to expand, rather than using the previous word as
usual.
nil, an abbrev entered entirely in upper
case is expanded using all upper case. Otherwise, an abbrev entered
entirely in upper case is expanded by capitalizing each word of the
expansion.
expand-abbrev to use as the start
of the next abbrev to be expanded. (nil means use the word
before point instead.) abbrev-start-location is set to
nil each time expand-abbrev is called. This variable is
also set by abbrev-prefix-mark.
abbrev-start-location has been set. Trying to expand an abbrev
in any other buffer clears abbrev-start-location. This variable
is set by abbrev-prefix-mark.
abbrev-symbol of the most recent abbrev expanded. This
information is left by expand-abbrev for the sake of the
unexpand-abbrev command (see section `Expanding Abbrevs' in The GNU Emacs Manual).
expand-abbrev for the sake of the
unexpand-abbrev command.
nil if the abbrev
has already been unexpanded. This contains information left by
expand-abbrev for the sake of the unexpand-abbrev command.
The following sample code shows a simple use of
pre-abbrev-expand-hook. If the user terminates an abbrev with a
punctuation character, the hook function asks for confirmation. Thus,
this hook allows the user to decide whether to expand the abbrev, and
aborts expansion if it is not confirmed.
(add-hook 'pre-abbrev-expand-hook 'query-if-not-space) ;; This is the function invoked bypre-abbrev-expand-hook. ;; If the user terminated the abbrev with a space, the function does ;; nothing (that is, it returns so that the abbrev can expand). If the ;; user entered some other character, this function asks whether ;; expansion should continue. ;; If the user answers the prompt with y, the function returns ;;nil(because of thenotfunction), but that is ;; acceptable; the return value has no effect on expansion. (defun query-if-not-space () (if (/= ?\ (preceding-char)) (if (not (y-or-n-p "Do you want to expand this abbrev? ")) (error "Not expanding this abbrev"))))
Here we list the variables that hold the abbrev tables for the preloaded major modes of Emacs.
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