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This section describes commands that indent all the lines in the region. They return unpredictable values.
This command indents each nonblank line starting between start
(inclusive) and end (exclusive). If to-column is nil
,
indent-region
indents each nonblank line by calling the current
mode's indentation function, the value of indent-line-function
.
If to-column is non-nil
, it should be an integer specifying the
number of columns of indentation; then this function gives each line exactly
that much indentation, by either adding or deleting whitespace.
If there is a fill prefix, indent-region
indents each line by making
it start with the fill prefix.
The value of this variable is a function that can be used by
indent-region
as a short cut. It should take two arguments, the
start and end of the region. You should design the function so that it will
produce the same results as indenting the lines of the region one by one,
but presumably faster.
If the value is nil
, there is no short cut, and indent-region
actually works line by line.
A short-cut function is useful in modes such as C mode and Lisp mode, where
the indent-line-function
must scan from the beginning of the function
definition: applying it to each line would be quadratic in time. The short
cut can update the scan information as it moves through the lines indenting
them; this takes linear time. In a mode where indenting a line individually
is fast, there is no need for a short cut.
indent-region
with a non-nil
argument to-column has a
different meaning and does not use this variable.
This command indents all lines starting between start (inclusive) and end (exclusive) sideways by count columns. This “preserves the shape” of the affected region, moving it as a rigid unit. Consequently, this command is useful not only for indenting regions of unindented text, but also for indenting regions of formatted code.
For example, if count is 3, this command adds 3 columns of indentation to each of the lines beginning in the region specified.
In Mail mode, C-c C-y (mail-yank-original
) uses
indent-rigidly
to indent the text copied from the message being
replied to.
This is like indent-rigidly
, except that it doesn't alter lines that
start within strings or comments.
In addition, it doesn't alter a line if nochange-regexp matches at the
beginning of the line (if nochange-regexp is non-nil
).
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Ce document a été généré par Eric Reinbold le 13 Octobre 2007 en utilisant texi2html 1.78.