A minibuffer history list records previous minibuffer inputs so the user can reuse them conveniently. It is a variable whose value is a list of strings (previous inputs), most recent first.
There are many separate minibuffer history lists, used for different kinds of inputs. It’s the Lisp programmer’s job to specify the right history list for each use of the minibuffer.
You specify a minibuffer history list with the optional history argument to read-from-minibuffer
or completing-read
. Here are the possible values for it:
Use variable (a symbol) as the history list.
Use variable (a symbol) as the history list, and assume that the initial history position is startpos (a nonnegative integer).
Specifying 0 for startpos is equivalent to just specifying the symbol variable. previous-history-element
will display the most recent element of the history list in the minibuffer. If you specify a positive startpos, the minibuffer history functions behave as if (elt variable (1- startpos))
were the history element currently shown in the minibuffer.
For consistency, you should also specify that element of the history as the initial minibuffer contents, using the initial argument to the minibuffer input function (see Initial Input).
If you don’t specify history, then the default history list minibuffer-history
is used. For other standard history lists, see below. You can also create your own history list variable; just initialize it to nil
before the first use. If the variable is buffer local, then each buffer will have its own input history list.
Both read-from-minibuffer
and completing-read
add new elements to the history list automatically, and provide commands to allow the user to reuse items on the list. The only thing your program needs to do to use a history list is to initialize it and to pass its name to the input functions when you wish. But it is safe to modify the list by hand when the minibuffer input functions are not using it.
Emacs functions that add a new element to a history list can also delete old elements if the list gets too long. The variable history-length
specifies the maximum length for most history lists. To specify a different maximum length for a particular history list, put the length in the history-length
property of the history list symbol. The variable history-delete-duplicates
specifies whether to delete duplicates in history.
This function adds a new element newelt, if it isn’t the empty string, to the history list stored in the variable history-var, and returns the updated history list. It limits the list length to the value of maxelt (if non-nil
) or history-length
(described below). The possible values of maxelt have the same meaning as the values of history-length
. history-var cannot refer to a lexical variable.
Normally, add-to-history
removes duplicate members from the history list if history-delete-duplicates
is non-nil
. However, if keep-all is non-nil
, that says not to remove duplicates, and to add newelt to the list even if it is empty.
If the value of this variable is nil
, standard functions that read from the minibuffer don’t add new elements to the history list. This lets Lisp programs explicitly manage input history by using add-to-history
. The default value is t
.
The value of this variable specifies the maximum length for all history lists that don’t specify their own maximum lengths. If the value is t
, that means there is no maximum (don’t delete old elements). If a history list variable’s symbol has a non-nil
history-length
property, it overrides this variable for that particular history list.
If the value of this variable is t
, that means when adding a new history element, all previous identical elements are deleted.
Here are some of the standard minibuffer history list variables:
The default history list for minibuffer history input.
A history list for arguments to query-replace
(and similar arguments to other commands).
A history list for file-name arguments.
A history list for buffer-name arguments.
A history list for regular expression arguments.
A history list for arguments that are names of extended commands.
A history list for arguments that are shell commands.
A history list for arguments that are Lisp expressions to evaluate.
A history list for arguments that are faces.
A history list for variable-name arguments read by read-variable
.
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/Minibuffer-History.html