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The indentation pattern for a Lisp expression can depend on the function called by the expression. For each Lisp function, you can choose among several predefined patterns of indentation, or define an arbitrary one with a Lisp program.
The standard pattern of indentation is as follows: the second line of the expression is indented under the first argument, if that is on the same line as the beginning of the expression; otherwise, the second line is indented underneath the function name. Each following line is indented under the previous line whose nesting depth is the same.
If the variable lisp-indent-offset
is non-nil
, it overrides
the usual indentation pattern for the second line of an expression, so that
such lines are always indented lisp-indent-offset
more columns than
the containing list.
Certain functions override the standard pattern. Functions whose names
start with def
treat the second lines as the start of a body,
by indenting the second line lisp-body-indent
additional columns
beyond the open-parenthesis that starts the expression.
You can override the standard pattern in various ways for individual
functions, according to the lisp-indent-function
property of the
function name. Normally you would use this for macro definitions and
specify it using the declare
construct (voir (elisp)Defining Macros section `Defining Macros' dans the Emacs Lisp Reference Manual).
Ce document a été généré par Eric Reinbold le 23 Février 2009 en utilisant texi2html 1.78.