A syntax table is a data structure which can be used to look up the syntax class and other syntactic properties of each character. Syntax tables are used by Lisp programs for scanning and moving across text.
Internally, a syntax table is a char-table (see Char-Tables). The element at index c describes the character with code c; its value is a cons cell which specifies the syntax of the character in question. See Syntax Table Internals, for details. However, instead of using aset
and aref
to modify and inspect syntax table contents, you should usually use the higher-level functions char-syntax
and modify-syntax-entry
, which are described in Syntax Table Functions.
This function returns t
if object is a syntax table.
Each buffer has its own major mode, and each major mode has its own idea of the syntax class of various characters. For example, in Lisp mode, the character ‘;’ begins a comment, but in C mode, it terminates a statement. To support these variations, the syntax table is local to each buffer. Typically, each major mode has its own syntax table, which it installs in all buffers that use that mode. For example, the variable emacs-lisp-mode-syntax-table
holds the syntax table used by Emacs Lisp mode, and c-mode-syntax-table
holds the syntax table used by C mode. Changing a major mode’s syntax table alters the syntax in all of that mode’s buffers, as well as in any buffers subsequently put in that mode. Occasionally, several similar modes share one syntax table. See Example Major Modes, for an example of how to set up a syntax table.
A syntax table can inherit from another syntax table, which is called its parent syntax table. A syntax table can leave the syntax class of some characters unspecified, by giving them the “inherit” syntax class; such a character then acquires the syntax class specified by the parent syntax table (see Syntax Class Table). Emacs defines a standard syntax table, which is the default parent syntax table, and is also the syntax table used by Fundamental mode.
This function returns the standard syntax table, which is the syntax table used in Fundamental mode.
Syntax tables are not used by the Emacs Lisp reader, which has its own built-in syntactic rules which cannot be changed. (Some Lisp systems provide ways to redefine the read syntax, but we decided to leave this feature out of Emacs Lisp for simplicity.)
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Licensed under the GNU GPL license.
https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/elisp/Syntax-Basics.html