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A register is a sort of variable used in Emacs editing that can hold a variety of different kinds of values. Each register is named by a single character. All ASCII characters and their meta variants (but with the exception of C-g) can be used to name registers. Thus, there are 255 possible registers. A register is designated in Emacs Lisp by the character that is its name.
This variable is an alist of elements of the form (name .
contents)
. Normally, there is one element for each Emacs
register that has been used.
The object name is a character (an integer) identifying the register.
The contents of a register can have several possible types:
A number stands for itself. If insert-register
finds a number
in the register, it converts the number to decimal.
A marker represents a buffer position to jump to.
A string is text saved in the register.
A rectangle is represented by a list of strings.
(window-configuration position)
This represents a window configuration to restore in one frame, and a position to jump to in the current buffer.
(frame-configuration position)
This represents a frame configuration to restore, and a position to jump to in the current buffer.
This represents a file to visit; jumping to this value visits file filename.
This represents a file to visit and a position in it; jumping to this value visits file filename and goes to buffer position position. Restoring this type of position asks the user for confirmation first.
The functions in this section return unpredictable values unless otherwise stated.
This function returns the contents of the register
reg, or nil
if it has no contents.
This function sets the contents of register reg to value. A register can be set to any value, but the other register functions expect only certain data types. The return value is value.
This command displays what is contained in register reg.
This command inserts contents of register reg into the current buffer.
Normally, this command puts point before the inserted text, and the
mark after it. However, if the optional second argument beforep
is non-nil
, it puts the mark before and point after.
You can pass a non-nil
second argument beforep to this
function interactively by supplying any prefix argument.
If the register contains a rectangle, then the rectangle is inserted with its upper left corner at point. This means that text is inserted in the current line and underneath it on successive lines.
If the register contains something other than saved text (a string) or a rectangle (a list), currently useless things happen. This may be changed in the future.
This function reads and returns a register name, prompting with
prompt and possibly showing a preview of the existing registers
and their contents. The preview is shown in a temporary window, after
the delay specified by the user option register-preview-delay
,
if its value and register-alist
are both non-nil
. The
preview is also shown if the user requests help (e.g., by typing the
help character). We recommend that all interactive commands which
read register names use this function.
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