2 @c This is an annex of the Emacs manual.
3 @c Author: Daniel Pfeiffer <Daniel.Pfeiffer@Informatik.START.dbp.de>
4 @setfilename ../../info/autotype.info
5 @c @node Autotypist, Picture, Abbrevs, Top
6 @c @chapter Features for Automatic Typing
7 @settitle Features for Automatic Typing
8 @documentencoding UTF-8
10 @c @cindex selfinserting text
14 Copyright @copyright{} 1994--1995, 1999, 2001--2014
15 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
18 Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
19 under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or
20 any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no
21 Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover Texts being ``A GNU Manual'',
22 and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a) below. A copy of the license
23 is included in the section entitled ``GNU Free Documentation License''.
25 (a) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: ``You have the freedom to copy and
26 modify this GNU manual.''
30 @dircategory Emacs misc features
32 * Autotype: (autotype). Convenient features for text that you enter
39 @center @titlefont{Autotyping}
41 @center Convenient features for text that you enter frequently in Emacs
43 @center Daniel Pfeiffer
44 @center additions by Dave Love
47 @vskip 0pt plus 1filll
56 Under certain circumstances you will find yourself typing similar things
57 over and over again. This is especially true of form letters and programming
58 language constructs. Project-specific header comments, flow-control
59 constructs or magic numbers are essentially the same every time. Emacs has
60 various features for doing tedious and repetitive typing chores for you
61 in addition to the Abbrev features (@pxref{Abbrevs,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}).
63 One solution is using skeletons, flexible rules that say what to
64 insert, and how to do it. Various programming language modes offer some
65 ready-to-use skeletons, and you can adapt them to suit your needs or
66 taste, or define new ones.
68 Another feature is automatic insertion of what you want into empty files,
69 depending on the file-name or the mode as appropriate. You can have a file or
70 a skeleton inserted, or you can call a function. Then there is the
71 possibility to have Un*x interpreter scripts automatically take on a magic
72 number and be executable as soon as they are saved. Or you can have a
73 copyright notice's year updated, if necessary, every time you save a
74 file. Similarly for time stamps in the file.
76 URLs can be inserted based on a word at point. Flexible templates can
77 be defined for inserting and navigating between text more generally. A
78 sort of meta-expansion facility can be used to try a set of alternative
79 completions and expansions of text at point.
86 * Using Skeletons:: How to insert a skeleton into your text.
87 * Wrapping Skeletons:: Putting existing text within a skeleton.
88 * Skeletons as Abbrevs:: An alternative for issuing skeleton commands.
89 * Skeleton Language:: Making skeleton commands insert what you want.
90 * Inserting Pairs:: Typing one character and getting another
92 * Autoinserting:: Filling up empty files as soon as you visit them.
93 * Copyrights:: Inserting and updating copyrights.
94 * Executables:: Turning interpreter scripts into executables.
95 * Timestamps:: Updating dates and times in modified files.
96 * QuickURL:: Inserting URLs based on text at point.
97 * Tempo:: Flexible template insertion.
98 * Hippie Expand:: Expansion of text trying various methods.
100 * GNU Free Documentation License:: The license for this documentation.
107 @node Using Skeletons
108 @chapter Using Skeletons
110 @cindex using skeletons
112 When you want Emacs to insert a form letter or a typical construct of the
113 programming language you are using, skeletons are a means of accomplishing
114 this. Normally skeletons each have a command of their own, that, when called,
115 will insert the skeleton. These commands can be issued in the usual ways
116 (@pxref{Commands,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}). Modes that offer various skeletons will often
117 bind these to key-sequences on the @kbd{C-c} prefix, as well as having
118 an @cite{Insert} menu and maybe even predefined abbrevs for them
119 (@pxref{Skeletons as Abbrevs}).
121 The simplest kind of skeleton will simply insert some text indented
122 according to the major mode and leave the cursor at a likely place in the
123 middle. Interactive skeletons may prompt you for a string that will be part
124 of the inserted text.
126 Skeletons may ask for input several times. They even have a looping
127 mechanism in which you will be asked for input as long as you are willing to
128 furnish it. An example would be multiple ``else if'' conditions. You can
129 recognize this situation by a prompt ending in @key{RET}, @kbd{C-g}
131 means that entering an empty string will simply assume that you are finished.
132 Typing quit on the other hand terminates the loop but also the rest of the
133 skeleton, e.g., an ``else'' clause is skipped. Only a syntactically necessary
134 termination still gets inserted.
138 @node Wrapping Skeletons
139 @chapter Wrapping Skeletons Around Existing Text
140 @cindex wrapping skeletons
142 Often you will find yourself with some code that for whatever reason
143 suddenly becomes conditional. Or you have written a bit of text and want to
144 put it in the middle of a form letter. Skeletons provide a means for
145 accomplishing this, and can even, in the case of programming languages,
146 reindent the wrapped code for you.
148 Skeleton commands take an optional numeric prefix argument
149 (@pxref{Arguments,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}). This is interpreted in two different ways depending
150 on whether the prefix is positive, i.e., forwards oriented, or negative,
151 i.e., backwards oriented.
153 A positive prefix means to wrap the skeleton around that many
154 following words. This is accomplished by putting the words there where
155 the point is normally left after that skeleton is inserted (@pxref{Using
156 Skeletons}). The point (@pxref{Point,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}) is left at the next
157 interesting spot in the skeleton instead.
159 A negative prefix means to do something similar with that many previously
160 marked interregions (@pxref{Mark,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}). In the simplest case, if you type
161 @kbd{M--} just before issuing the skeleton command, that will wrap the
162 skeleton around the current region, just like a positive argument would have
163 wrapped it around a number of words.
165 Smaller negative arguments will wrap that many interregions into successive
166 interesting spots within the skeleton, again leaving the point at the next one.
167 We speak about interregions rather than regions here, because we treat them in
168 the order they appear in the buffer, which coincides with successive regions
169 only if they were marked in order.
171 That is, if you marked in alphabetical order the points A B C [] (where []
172 represents the point) and call a skeleton command with @kbd{M-- 3}, you will
173 wrap the text from A to B into the first interesting spot of the skeleton, the
174 text from B to C into the next one, the text from C to the point into the
175 third one, and leave the point in the fourth one. If there are less marks in
176 the buffer, or if the skeleton defines less interesting points, the surplus is
179 If, on the other hand, you marked in alphabetical order the points [] A C B,
180 and call a skeleton command with @kbd{M-- 3}, you will wrap the text from
181 point to A, then the text from A to C and finally the text from C to B@. This
182 is done because the regions overlap and Emacs would be helplessly lost if it
183 tried to follow the order in which you marked these points.
187 @node Skeletons as Abbrevs
188 @chapter Skeletons as Abbrev Expansions
189 @cindex skeletons as abbrevs
191 Rather than use a key binding for every skeleton command, you can also
192 define an abbreviation (@pxref{Defining Abbrevs,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}) that will expand
193 (@pxref{Expanding Abbrevs,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}) into the skeleton.
195 Say you want @samp{ifst} to be an abbreviation for the C language if
196 statement. You will tell Emacs that @samp{ifst} expands to the empty string
197 and then calls the skeleton command. In Emacs Lisp you can say something like
198 @code{(define-abbrev c-mode-abbrev-table "ifst" "" 'c-if)}. Or you can edit
199 the output from @kbd{M-x list-abbrevs} to make it look like this:
202 (c-mode-abbrev-table)
207 (Some blank lines of no semantic significance, and other abbrev tables,
212 @node Skeleton Language
213 @chapter Skeleton Language
214 @cindex skeleton language
216 @findex skeleton-insert
217 Skeletons are an shorthand extension to the Lisp language, where various
218 atoms directly perform either actions on the current buffer or rudimentary
219 flow control mechanisms. Skeletons are interpreted by the function
220 @code{skeleton-insert}.
222 A skeleton is a list starting with an interactor, which is usually a
223 prompt-string, or @code{nil} when not needed, but can also be a Lisp
224 expression for complex read functions or for returning some calculated value.
225 The rest of the list are any number of elements as described in the following
229 @item @code{"@var{string}"}, @code{?@var{c}}, @code{?\@var{c}}
230 @vindex skeleton-transformation
231 Insert string or character. Literal strings and characters are passed through
232 @code{skeleton-transformation} when that is non-@code{nil}.
234 @c ??? something seems very wrong here.
235 Insert a newline and align under current line, but not if this is the
236 last element of a skeleton and the newline would be inserted at end of
237 line, or this is the first element and the newline would be inserted
238 at beginning of line. Use newline character @code{?\n} to prevent
239 alignment. Use @code{"\n"} as the first or last string element of a
240 skeleton to insert a newline unconditionally.
242 Interesting point. When wrapping skeletons around successive regions, they are
243 put at these places. Point is left at first @code{_} where nothing is wrapped.
245 Indent line according to major mode. When following element is @code{_}, and
246 there is a interregion that will be wrapped here, indent that interregion.
248 Logical and. If preceding element moved point, i.e., usually inserted
249 something, do following element.
251 Logical xor. If preceding element didn't move point, i.e., usually inserted
252 nothing, do following element.
253 @item @code{-@var{number}}
254 Delete preceding number characters. Depends on value of
255 @code{skeleton-untabify}.
256 @item @code{()} or @code{nil}
258 @item @var{lisp-expression}
259 Evaluated, and the return value is again interpreted as a skeleton element.
261 A special variable that, when evaluated the first time, usually prompts
262 for input according to the skeleton's interactor. It is then set to the
263 return value resulting from the interactor. Each subskeleton has its local
264 copy of this variable.
265 @item @code{v1}, @code{v2}
266 Skeleton-local user variables.
267 @item @code{'@var{expression}}
268 Evaluate following Lisp expression for its side-effect, but prevent it from
269 being interpreted as a skeleton element.
271 Subskeletons are inserted recursively, not once, but as often as the user
272 enters something at the subskeletons interactor. Thus there must be a
273 @code{str} in the subskeleton. They can also be used non-interactively, when
274 prompt is a lisp-expression that returns successive list-elements.
276 Ignored. Execution resumes here if the user quits during skeleton
279 A constant which is non-@code{nil} when the @code{resume:} section was entered
280 because the user quit.
283 @findex skeleton-further-elements
284 Some modes also use other skeleton elements they themselves defined. For
285 example in shell script mode's skeletons you will find @code{<} which does a
286 rigid indentation backwards, or in CC mode's skeletons you find the
287 self-inserting elements @code{@{} and @code{@}}. These are defined by the
288 buffer-local variable @code{skeleton-further-elements} which is a list of
289 variables bound while interpreting a skeleton.
291 @findex define-skeleton
292 The macro @code{define-skeleton} defines a command for interpreting a
293 skeleton. The first argument is the command name, the second is a
294 documentation string, and the rest is an interactor and any number of skeleton
295 elements together forming a skeleton. This skeleton is assigned to a variable
296 of the same name as the command and can thus be overridden from your
297 @file{~/.emacs} file (@pxref{Init File,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}).
301 @node Inserting Pairs
302 @chapter Inserting Matching Pairs of Characters
303 @cindex inserting pairs
306 Various characters usually appear in pairs. When, for example, you insert
307 an open parenthesis, no matter whether you are programming or writing prose,
308 you will surely enter a closing one later. By entering both at the same time
309 and leaving the cursor in between, Emacs can guarantee you that such
310 parentheses are always balanced. And if you have a non-qwerty keyboard, where
311 typing some of the stranger programming language symbols makes you bend your
312 fingers backwards, this can be quite relieving too.
314 @findex skeleton-pair-insert-maybe
315 @vindex skeleton-pair
316 This is done by binding the first key (@pxref{Rebinding,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}) of
317 the pair to @code{skeleton-pair-insert-maybe} instead of
318 @code{self-insert-command}. The ``maybe'' comes from the fact that
319 this at-first surprising behavior is initially turned off. To enable
320 it, you must set @code{skeleton-pair} to some non-@code{nil} value.
321 And even then, a positive argument (@pxref{Arguments,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}) will
322 make this key behave like a self-inserting key
323 (@pxref{Inserting Text,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}).
325 @vindex skeleton-pair-on-word
326 While this breaks with the stated intention of always balancing pairs, it
327 turns out that one often doesn't want pairing to occur, when the following
328 character is part of a word. If you want pairing to occur even then, set
329 @code{skeleton-pair-on-word} to some non-@code{nil} value.
331 @vindex skeleton-pair-alist
332 Pairing is possible for all visible characters. By default the
333 parenthesis @samp{(}, the square bracket @samp{[}, the brace
334 @samp{@{}, the pointed bracket @samp{<} and the backquote @samp{`} all
335 pair with the symmetrical character. All other characters pair
336 themselves. This behavior can be modified by the variable
337 @code{skeleton-pair-alist}. This is in fact an alist of skeletons
338 (@pxref{Skeleton Language}), with the first part of each sublist
339 matching the typed character. This is the position of the interactor,
340 but since pairs don't need the @code{str} element, this is ignored.
342 Some modes have bound the command @code{skeleton-pair-insert-maybe}
343 to relevant keys. These modes also configure the pairs as
344 appropriate. For example, when typing english prose, you'd expect the
345 backquote (@samp{`}) to pair with the quote (@samp{'}), while in Shell
346 script mode it must pair to itself. They can also inhibit pairing in
347 certain contexts. For example an escaped character stands for itself.
352 @chapter Autoinserting Text in Empty Files
353 @cindex autoinserting
356 @kbd{M-x auto-insert} will put some predefined text at the beginning of
357 the buffer. The main application for this function, as its name suggests,
358 is to have it be called automatically every time an empty, and only an
359 empty file is visited. This is accomplished by putting @code{(add-hook
360 'find-file-hook 'auto-insert)} into your @file{~/.emacs} file
361 (@pxref{Init File,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}).
363 @vindex auto-insert-alist
364 What gets inserted, if anything, is determined by the variable
365 @code{auto-insert-alist}. The @sc{car}s of this list are each either
366 a mode name, making an element applicable when a buffer is in that
367 mode. Or they can be a string, which is a regexp matched against the
368 buffer's file name. In that way different kinds of files that have
369 the same mode in Emacs can be distinguished. The @sc{car}s may also
370 be cons cells consisting of mode name or regexp as above and an
371 additional descriptive string.
373 When a matching element is found, the @sc{cdr} says what to do. It may
374 be a string, which is a file name, whose contents are to be inserted, if
375 that file is found in the directory @code{auto-insert-directory} or under a
376 absolute file name. Or it can be a skeleton (@pxref{Skeleton Language}) to
379 It can also be a function, which allows doing various things. The function
380 can simply insert some text, indeed, it can be skeleton command (@pxref{Using
381 Skeletons}). It can be a lambda function which will for example conditionally
382 call another function. Or it can even reset the mode for the buffer. If you
383 want to perform several such actions in order, you use a vector, i.e., several
384 of the above elements between square brackets (@samp{[@r{@dots{}}]}).
386 By default C and C++ headers insert a definition of a symbol derived from
387 the filename to prevent multiple inclusions. C and C++ sources insert an
388 include of the header. Makefiles insert the file makefile.inc if it exists.
390 TeX and bibTeX mode files insert the file tex-insert.tex if it exists, while
391 LaTeX mode files insert a typical @code{\documentclass} frame. Html
392 files insert a skeleton with the usual frame.
394 Ada mode files call the Ada header skeleton command. Emacs lisp
395 source files insert the usual header, with a copyright of your
396 environment variable @env{$ORGANIZATION} or else the FSF, and prompt
397 for valid keywords describing the contents. Files in a @file{bin}
398 directory for which Emacs could determine no specialized mode
399 (@pxref{Choosing Modes,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}) are set to Shell script mode.
401 @findex define-auto-insert
402 In Lisp (@pxref{Init File,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}) you can use the function
403 @code{define-auto-insert} to add to or modify
404 @code{auto-insert-alist}. See its documentation with @kbd{C-h f
408 The variable @code{auto-insert} says what to do when @code{auto-insert} is
409 called non-interactively, e.g., when a newly found file is empty (see above):
414 Insert something if possible, i.e., there is a matching entry in
415 @code{auto-insert-alist}.
417 Insert something if possible, but mark as unmodified.
420 @vindex auto-insert-query
421 The variable @code{auto-insert-query} controls whether to ask about
422 inserting something. When this is @code{nil}, inserting is only done with
423 @kbd{M-x auto-insert}. When this is @code{function}, you are queried
424 whenever @code{auto-insert} is called as a function, such as when Emacs
425 visits an empty file and you have set the above-mentioned hook. Otherwise
426 you are always queried.
428 @vindex auto-insert-prompt
429 When querying, the variable @code{auto-insert-prompt}'s value is used as a
430 prompt for a y-or-n-type question. If this includes a @samp{%s} construct,
431 that is replaced by what caused the insertion rule to be chosen. This is
432 either a descriptive text, the mode-name of the buffer or the regular
433 expression that matched the filename.
438 @chapter Inserting and Updating Copyrights
442 @kbd{M-x copyright} is a skeleton inserting command, that adds a copyright
443 notice at the point. The ``by'' part is taken from your environment variable
444 @env{$ORGANIZATION} or if that isn't set you are prompted for it. If the
445 buffer has a comment syntax (@pxref{Comments,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}), this is inserted as a comment.
447 @findex copyright-update
448 @vindex copyright-limit
449 @vindex copyright-current-year
450 @kbd{M-x copyright-update} looks for a copyright notice in the first
451 @code{copyright-limit} characters of the buffer and updates it when necessary.
452 The current year (variable @code{copyright-current-year}) is added to the
453 existing ones, in the same format as the preceding year, i.e., 1994, '94 or 94.
454 If a dash-separated year list up to last year is found, that is extended to
455 current year, else the year is added separated by a comma. Or it replaces
456 them when this is called with a prefix argument. If a header referring to a
457 wrong version of the GNU General Public License (@pxref{Copying,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}) is found,
460 An interesting application for this function is to have it be called
461 automatically every time a file is saved. This is accomplished by
462 putting @code{(add-hook 'before-save-hook 'copyright-update)} into
463 your @file{~/.emacs} file (@pxref{Init File,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}). Alternative,
464 you can do @kbd{M-x customize-variable @key{RET} before-save-hook
465 @key{RET}}. @code{copyright-update} is conveniently listed as an
466 option in the customization buffer.
468 @vindex copyright-query
469 The variable @code{copyright-query} controls whether to update the
470 copyright or whether to ask about it. When this is @code{nil} updating is
471 only done with @kbd{M-x copyright-update}. When this is @code{function}
472 you are queried whenever @code{copyright-update} is called as a function,
473 such as in the @code{before-save-hook} feature mentioned above. Otherwise
474 you are always queried.
479 @chapter Making Interpreter Scripts Executable
482 @vindex executable-prefix
483 @vindex executable-chmod
484 Various interpreter modes such as Shell script mode or AWK mode will
485 automatically insert or update the buffer's magic number, a special
486 comment on the first line that makes the @code{exec} systemcall know
487 how to execute the script. To this end the script is automatically
488 made executable upon saving, with @code{executable-chmod} as argument
489 to the system @code{chmod} command. The magic number is prefixed by
490 the value of @code{executable-prefix}.
492 @vindex executable-magicless-file-regexp
493 Any file whose name matches @code{executable-magicless-file-regexp} is not
494 furnished with a magic number, nor is it made executable. This is mainly
495 intended for resource files, which are only meant to be read in.
497 @vindex executable-insert
498 The variable @code{executable-insert} says what to do when
499 @code{executable-set-magic} is called non-interactively, e.g., when file has no
500 or the wrong magic number:
505 Insert or update magic number.
507 Insert or update magic number, but mark as unmodified.
510 @findex executable-set-magic
511 @vindex executable-query
512 The variable @code{executable-query} controls whether to ask about
513 inserting or updating the magic number. When this is @code{nil} updating
514 is only done with @kbd{M-x executable-set-magic}. When this is
515 @code{function} you are queried whenever @code{executable-set-magic} is
516 called as a function, such as when Emacs puts a buffer in Shell script
517 mode. Otherwise you are always queried.
519 @findex executable-self-display
520 @kbd{M-x executable-self-display} adds a magic number to the buffer, which
521 will turn it into a self displaying text file, when called as a Un*x command.
522 The ``interpreter'' used is @code{executable-self-display} with argument
526 @chapter Maintaining Timestamps in Modified Files
530 @vindex before-save-hook
531 The @code{time-stamp} command can be used to update automatically a
532 template in a file with a new time stamp every time you save the file.
533 Customize the hook @code{before-save-hook} to add the function
534 @code{time-stamp} to arrange this. It you use Custom to do this,
535 then @code{time-stamp} is conveniently listed as an option in the
536 customization buffer.
538 @vindex time-stamp-active
539 @vindex time-stamp-format
540 @vindex time-stamp-start
541 The time stamp is updated only if the customizable variable
542 @code{time-stamp-active} is on, which it is by default; the command
543 @code{time-stamp-toggle-active} can be used to toggle it. The format of
544 the time stamp is set by the customizable variable
545 @code{time-stamp-format}.
547 @vindex time-stamp-line-limit
548 @vindex time-stamp-end
549 @vindex time-stamp-count
550 @vindex time-stamp-inserts-lines
551 The variables @code{time-stamp-line-limit}, @code{time-stamp-start},
552 @code{time-stamp-end}, @code{time-stamp-count}, and
553 @code{time-stamp-inserts-lines} control finding the template. Do not
554 change these in your init file or you will be incompatible with other
555 people's files. If you must change them, do so only in the local
556 variables section of the file itself.
558 Normally the template must appear in the first 8 lines of a file and
559 look like one of the following:
566 The time stamp is written between the brackets or quotes:
569 Time-stamp: <1998-02-18 10:20:51 gildea>
573 @chapter QuickURL: Inserting URLs Based on Text at Point
575 @vindex quickurl-url-file
578 @kbd{M-x quickurl} can be used to insert a URL into a buffer based on
579 the text at point. The URLs are stored in an external file defined by
580 the variable @code{quickurl-url-file} as a list of either cons cells of
581 the form @code{(@var{key} . @var{URL})} or
582 lists of the form @code{(@var{key} @var{URL} @var{comment})}. These
583 specify that @kbd{M-x quickurl} should insert @var{URL} if the word
584 @var{key} is at point, for example:
587 (("FSF" "http://www.fsf.org/" "The Free Software Foundation")
588 ("emacs" . "http://www.emacs.org/")
589 ("hagbard" "http://www.hagbard.demon.co.uk" "Hagbard's World"))
592 @findex quickurl-add-url
593 @findex quickurl-list
594 @kbd{M-x quickurl-add-url} can be used to add a new @var{key}/@var{URL}
595 pair. @kbd{M-x quickurl-list} provides interactive editing of the URL
599 @chapter Tempo: Flexible Template Insertion
602 The Tempo package provides a simple way to define powerful templates, or
603 macros, if you wish. It is mainly intended for, but not limited to,
604 programmers to be used for creating shortcuts for editing
605 certain kinds of documents.
607 @findex tempo-backward-mark
608 @findex tempo-forward-mark
609 A template is defined as a list of items to be inserted in the current
610 buffer at point. Some can be simple strings, while others can control
611 formatting or define special points of interest in the inserted text.
612 @kbd{M-x tempo-backward-mark} and @kbd{M-x tempo-forward-mark} can be
613 used to jump between such points.
615 More flexible templates can be created by including Lisp symbols, which
616 will be evaluated as variables, or lists, which will be evaluated
617 as Lisp expressions. Automatic completion of specified tags to expanded
618 templates can be provided.
620 @findex tempo-define-template
621 See the documentation for @code{tempo-define-template} for the different
622 items that can be used to define a tempo template with a command for
625 See the commentary in @file{tempo.el} for more information on using the
629 @chapter `Hippie' Expansion
631 @findex hippie-expand
633 @vindex hippie-expand-try-functions-list
634 @kbd{M-x hippie-expand} is a single command providing a variety of
635 completions and expansions. Called repeatedly, it tries all possible
636 completions in succession.
638 Which ones to try, and in which order, is determined by the contents of
639 the customizable option @code{hippie-expand-try-functions-list}. Much
640 customization of the expansion behavior can be made by changing the
641 order of, removing, or inserting new functions in this list. Given a
642 positive numeric argument, @kbd{M-x hippie-expand} jumps directly that
643 number of functions forward in this list. Given some other argument (a
644 negative argument or just @kbd{C-u}) it undoes the tried completion.
646 See the commentary in @file{hippie-exp.el} for more information on the
649 Typically you would bind @code{hippie-expand} to @kbd{M-/} with
650 @code{dabbrev-expand}, the standard binding of @kbd{M-/}, providing one
651 of the expansion possibilities.
653 @node GNU Free Documentation License
654 @appendix GNU Free Documentation License
655 @include doclicense.texi
658 @unnumbered Concept Index
662 @unnumbered Command Index
666 @unnumbered Variable Index