[ < ] | [ > ] | [ << ] | [Plus haut] | [ >> ] | [Top] | [Table des matières] | [Index] | [ ? ] |
Here are some other commands that find matches for a regular expression.
They all ignore case in matching, if the pattern contains no upper-case
letters and case-fold-search
is non-nil
. Aside from
occur
and its variants, all operate on the text from point to the end
of the buffer, or on the active region in Transient Mark mode.
Display a list showing each line in the buffer that contains a match for
regexp. To limit the search to part of the buffer, narrow to that
part (voir la section Narrowing). A numeric argument n specifies that n
lines of context are to be displayed before and after each matching line.
Currently, occur
can not correctly handle multiline matches.
The buffer ‘*Occur*’ containing the output serves as a menu for finding the occurrences in their original context. Click Mouse-2 on an occurrence listed in ‘*Occur*’, or position point there and type <RET>; this switches to the buffer that was searched and moves point to the original of the chosen occurrence. o and C-o display the match in another window; C-o does not select it.
After using M-x occur, you can use next-error
to visit the
occurrences found, one by one. Compilation Mode.
Synonym for M-x occur.
This function is just like occur
, except it is able to search through
multiple buffers. It asks you to specify the buffer names one by one.
This function is similar to multi-occur
, except the buffers to search
are specified by a regular expression that matches visited file names. With
a prefix argument, it uses the regular expression to match buffer names
instead.
Print the number of matches for regexp that exist in the buffer after point. In Transient Mark mode, if the region is active, the command operates on the region instead.
This command deletes each line that contains a match for regexp, operating on the text after point; it deletes the current line if it contains a match starting after point. In Transient Mark mode, if the region is active, the command operates on the region instead; it deletes a line partially contained in the region if it contains a match entirely contained in the region.
If a match is split across lines, flush-lines
deletes all those
lines. It deletes the lines before starting to look for the next match;
hence, it ignores a match starting on the same line at which another match
ended.
This command deletes each line that does not contain a match for regexp, operating on the text after point; if point is not at the beginning of a line, it always keeps the current line. In Transient Mark mode, if the region is active, the command operates on the region instead; it never deletes lines that are only partially contained in the region (a newline that ends a line counts as part of that line).
If a match is split across lines, this command keeps all those lines.
[ < ] | [ > ] | [ << ] | [Plus haut] | [ >> ] | [Top] | [Table des matières] | [Index] | [ ? ] |
Ce document a été généré par Eric Reinbold le 23 Février 2009 en utilisant texi2html 1.78.