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Normally, dynamic abbrev expansion ignores case when searching for expansions. That is, the expansion need not agree in case with the word you are expanding.
This feature is controlled by the variable dabbrev-case-fold-search
.
If it is t
, case is ignored in this search; if it is nil
, the
word and the expansion must match in case. If the value of
dabbrev-case-fold-search
is case-fold-search
, which is true by
default, then the variable case-fold-search
controls whether to
ignore case while searching for expansions.
Normally, dynamic abbrev expansion preserves the case pattern of the dynamic abbrev you are expanding, by converting the expansion to that case pattern.
The variable dabbrev-case-replace
controls whether to preserve the
case pattern of the dynamic abbrev. If it is t
, the dynamic abbrev's
case pattern is preserved in most cases; if it is nil
, the expansion
is always copied verbatim. If the value of dabbrev-case-replace
is
case-replace
, which is true by default, then the variable
case-replace
controls whether to copy the expansion verbatim.
However, if the expansion contains a complex mixed case pattern, and the
dynamic abbrev matches this pattern as far as it goes, then the expansion is
always copied verbatim, regardless of those variables. Thus, for example,
if the buffer contains variableWithSillyCasePattern
, and you type
v a M-/, it copies the expansion verbatim including its case pattern.
The variable dabbrev-abbrev-char-regexp
, if non-nil
, controls
which characters are considered part of a word, for dynamic expansion
purposes. The regular expression must match just one character, never two
or more. The same regular expression also determines which characters are
part of an expansion. The value nil
has a special meaning: dynamic
abbrevs are made of word characters, but expansions are made of word and
symbol characters.
In shell scripts and makefiles, a variable name is sometimes prefixed with
‘$’ and sometimes not. Major modes for this kind of text can customize
dynamic abbrev expansion to handle optional prefixes by setting the variable
dabbrev-abbrev-skip-leading-regexp
. Its value should be a regular
expression that matches the optional prefix that dynamic abbrev expression
should ignore.
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Ce document a été généré par Eric Reinbold le 23 Février 2009 en utilisant texi2html 1.78.