This section describes the keymaps, commands and user options used in the minibuffer to do completion.
The value of this variable is the completion table (see Basic Completion) used for completion in the minibuffer. This is the global variable that contains what completing-read
passes to try-completion
. It is used by minibuffer completion commands such as minibuffer-complete-word
.
This variable’s value is the predicate that completing-read
passes to try-completion
. The variable is also used by the other minibuffer completion functions.
This variable determines whether Emacs asks for confirmation before exiting the minibuffer; completing-read
binds this variable, and the function minibuffer-complete-and-exit
checks the value before exiting. If the value is nil
, confirmation is not required. If the value is confirm
, the user may exit with an input that is not a valid completion alternative, but Emacs asks for confirmation. If the value is confirm-after-completion
, the user may exit with an input that is not a valid completion alternative, but Emacs asks for confirmation if the user submitted the input right after any of the completion commands in minibuffer-confirm-exit-commands
.
This variable holds a list of commands that cause Emacs to ask for confirmation before exiting the minibuffer, if the require-match argument to completing-read
is confirm-after-completion
. The confirmation is requested if the user attempts to exit the minibuffer immediately after calling any command in this list.
This function completes the minibuffer contents by at most a single word. Even if the minibuffer contents have only one completion, minibuffer-complete-word
does not add any characters beyond the first character that is not a word constituent. See Syntax Tables.
This function completes the minibuffer contents as far as possible.
This function completes the minibuffer contents, and exits if confirmation is not required, i.e., if minibuffer-completion-confirm
is nil
. If confirmation is required, it is given by repeating this command immediately—the command is programmed to work without confirmation when run twice in succession.
This function creates a list of the possible completions of the current minibuffer contents. It works by calling all-completions
using the value of the variable minibuffer-completion-table
as the collection argument, and the value of minibuffer-completion-predicate
as the predicate argument. The list of completions is displayed as text in a buffer named *Completions*.
This function displays completions to the stream in standard-output
, usually a buffer. (See Read and Print, for more information about streams.) The argument completions is normally a list of completions just returned by all-completions
, but it does not have to be. Each element may be a symbol or a string, either of which is simply printed. It can also be a list of two strings, which is printed as if the strings were concatenated. The first of the two strings is the actual completion, the second string serves as annotation.
This function is called by minibuffer-completion-help
. A common way to use it is together with with-output-to-temp-buffer
, like this:
(with-output-to-temp-buffer "*Completions*" (display-completion-list (all-completions (buffer-string) my-alist)))
If this variable is non-nil
, the completion commands automatically display a list of possible completions whenever nothing can be completed because the next character is not uniquely determined.
completing-read
uses this value as the local keymap when an exact match of one of the completions is not required. By default, this keymap makes the following bindings:
minibuffer-completion-help
minibuffer-complete-word
minibuffer-complete
and uses minibuffer-local-map
as its parent keymap (see Definition of minibuffer-local-map).
completing-read
uses this value as the local keymap when an exact match of one of the completions is required. Therefore, no keys are bound to exit-minibuffer
, the command that exits the minibuffer unconditionally. By default, this keymap makes the following bindings:
minibuffer-complete-and-exit
minibuffer-complete-and-exit
and uses minibuffer-local-completion-map
as its parent keymap.
This is a sparse keymap that simply unbinds SPC; because filenames can contain spaces. The function read-file-name
combines this keymap with either minibuffer-local-completion-map
or minibuffer-local-must-match-map
.
If non-nil
, the M-< command will move to the end of the prompt if point is after the end of the prompt. If point is at or before the end of the prompt, move to the start of the buffer. If this variable is nil
, the command behaves like beginning-of-buffer
.
Copyright © 1990-1996, 1998-2019 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Licensed under the GNU GPL license.
https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/elisp/Completion-Commands.html