The functions for parsing words described below use the syntax table and char-script-table
to decide whether a given character is part of a word. See Syntax Tables, and see Character Properties.
This function moves point forward count words (or backward if count is negative). If count is omitted or nil
, it defaults to 1. In an interactive call, count is specified by the numeric prefix argument.
“Moving one word” means moving until point crosses a word-constituent character, which indicates the beginning of a word, and then continue moving until the word ends. By default, characters that begin and end words, known as word boundaries, are defined by the current buffer’s syntax table (see Syntax Class Table), but modes can override that by setting up a suitable find-word-boundary-function-table
, described below. Characters that belong to different scripts (as defined by char-script-table
), also define a word boundary (see Character Properties). In any case, this function cannot move point past the boundary of the accessible portion of the buffer, or across a field boundary (see Fields). The most common case of a field boundary is the end of the prompt in the minibuffer.
If it is possible to move count words, without being stopped prematurely by the buffer boundary or a field boundary, the value is t
. Otherwise, the return value is nil
and point stops at the buffer boundary or field boundary.
If inhibit-field-text-motion
is non-nil
, this function ignores field boundaries.
This function is just like forward-word
, except that it moves backward until encountering the front of a word, rather than forward.
This variable affects the behavior of forward-word
and backward-word
, and everything that uses them. If it is non-nil
, then characters in the escape and character-quote syntax classes count as part of words. Otherwise, they do not.
If this variable is non-nil
, certain motion functions including forward-word
, forward-sentence
, and forward-paragraph
ignore field boundaries.
This variable affects the behavior of forward-word
and backward-word
, and everything that uses them. Its value is a char-table (see Char-Tables) of functions to search for word boundaries. If a character has a non-nil
entry in this table, then when a word starts or ends with that character, the corresponding function will be called with 2 arguments: pos and limit. The function should return the position of the other word boundary. Specifically, if pos is smaller than limit, then pos is at the beginning of a word, and the function should return the position after the last character of the word; otherwise, pos is at the last character of a word, and the function should return the position of that word’s first character.
This function is like forward-word
, but it is not affected by find-word-boundary-function-table
. Lisp programs that should not change behavior when word movement is modified by modes which set that table, such as subword-mode
, should use this function instead of forward-word
.
This function is like backward-word
, but it is not affected by find-word-boundary-function-table
. Like with forward-word-strictly
, use this function instead of backward-word
when movement by words should only consider syntax tables.
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/Word-Motion.html