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This variable contains the default global keymap that maps Emacs keyboard
input to commands. The global keymap is normally this keymap. The default
global keymap is a full keymap that binds self-insert-command
to all
of the printing characters.
It is normal practice to change the bindings in the global keymap, but you should not assign this variable any value other than the keymap it starts out with.
This function returns the current global keymap. This is the same as the
value of global-map
unless you change one or the other.
(current-global-map) ⇒ (keymap [set-mark-command beginning-of-line … delete-backward-char]) |
This function returns the current buffer's local keymap, or nil
if it
has none. In the following example, the keymap for the ‘*scratch*’
buffer (using Lisp Interaction mode) is a sparse keymap in which the entry
for <ESC>, ASCII code 27, is another sparse keymap.
(current-local-map) ⇒ (keymap (10 . eval-print-last-sexp) (9 . lisp-indent-line) (127 . backward-delete-char-untabify) (27 keymap (24 . eval-defun) (17 . indent-sexp))) |
This function returns a list of the keymaps of currently enabled minor modes.
This function makes keymap the new current global keymap. It returns
nil
.
It is very unusual to change the global keymap.
This function makes keymap the new local keymap of the current
buffer. If keymap is nil
, then the buffer has no local
keymap. use-local-map
returns nil
. Most major mode commands
use this function.
This variable is an alist describing keymaps that may or may not be active according to the values of certain variables. Its elements look like this:
(variable . keymap) |
The keymap keymap is active whenever variable has a
non-nil
value. Typically variable is the variable that enables
or disables a minor mode. Voir la section Keymaps and Minor Modes.
Note that elements of minor-mode-map-alist
do not have the same
structure as elements of minor-mode-alist
. The map must be the
CDR of the element; a list with the map as the second element will not
do. The CDR can be either a keymap (a list) or a symbol whose function
definition is a keymap.
When more than one minor mode keymap is active, the earlier one in
minor-mode-map-alist
takes priority. But you should design minor
modes so that they don't interfere with each other. If you do this
properly, the order will not matter.
See Keymaps and Minor Modes, for more information about minor modes.
See also minor-mode-key-binding
(voir la section Functions for Key Lookup).
This variable allows major modes to override the key bindings for particular
minor modes. The elements of this alist look like the elements of
minor-mode-map-alist
: (variable . keymap)
.
If a variable appears as an element of
minor-mode-overriding-map-alist
, the map specified by that element
totally replaces any map specified for the same variable in
minor-mode-map-alist
.
minor-mode-overriding-map-alist
is automatically buffer-local in all
buffers.
If non-nil
, this variable holds a keymap to use instead of the
buffer's local keymap, any text property or overlay keymaps, and any minor
mode keymaps. This keymap, if specified, overrides all other maps that
would have been active, except for the current global map.
If non-nil
, this variable holds a keymap to use instead of
overriding-local-map
, the buffer's local keymap, text property or
overlay keymaps, and all the minor mode keymaps.
This variable is always local to the current terminal and cannot be buffer-local. Voir la section Multiple Displays. It is used to implement incremental search mode.
If this variable is non-nil
, the value of overriding-local-map
or overriding-terminal-local-map
can affect the display of the menu
bar. The default value is nil
, so those map variables have no effect
on the menu bar.
Note that these two map variables do affect the execution of key sequences entered using the menu bar, even if they do not affect the menu bar display. So if a menu bar key sequence comes in, you should clear the variables before looking up and executing that key sequence. Modes that use the variables would typically do this anyway; normally they respond to events that they do not handle by “unreading” them and exiting.
This variable holds a keymap for special events. If an event type has a
binding in this keymap, then it is special, and the binding for the event is
run directly by read-event
. Voir la section Special Events.
This variable holds a list of keymap alists to use for emulations modes. It
is intended for modes or packages using multiple minor-mode keymaps. Each
element is a keymap alist which has the same format and meaning as
minor-mode-map-alist
, or a symbol with a variable binding which is
such an alist. The “active” keymaps in each alist are used before
minor-mode-map-alist
and minor-mode-overriding-map-alist
.
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Ce document a été généré par Eric Reinbold le 13 Octobre 2007 en utilisant texi2html 1.78.