Next: Simple Match Data, Up: Match Data [Contents][Index]
This function replaces all or part of the text matched by the last search. It works by means of the match data.
This function performs a replacement operation on a buffer or string.
If you did the last search in a buffer, you should omit the
string argument or specify nil
for it, and make sure that
the current buffer is the one in which you performed the last search.
Then this function edits the buffer, replacing the matched text with
replacement. It leaves point at the end of the replacement
text.
If you performed the last search on a string, pass the same string as string. Then this function returns a new string, in which the matched text is replaced by replacement.
If fixedcase is non-nil
, then replace-match
uses
the replacement text without case conversion; otherwise, it converts
the replacement text depending upon the capitalization of the text to
be replaced. If the original text is all upper case, this converts
the replacement text to upper case. If all words of the original text
are capitalized, this capitalizes all the words of the replacement
text. If all the words are one-letter and they are all upper case,
they are treated as capitalized words rather than all-upper-case
words.
If literal is non-nil
, then replacement is inserted
exactly as it is, the only alterations being case changes as needed.
If it is nil
(the default), then the character ‘\’ is treated
specially. If a ‘\’ appears in replacement, then it must be
part of one of the following sequences:
This stands for the entire text being replaced.
This stands for the text that matched the nth subexpression in the original regexp. Subexpressions are those expressions grouped inside ‘\(…\)’. If the nth subexpression never matched, an empty string is substituted.
This stands for a single ‘\’ in the replacement text.
This stands for itself (for compatibility with replace-regexp
and related commands; see Regexp Replace in The GNU
Emacs Manual).
Any other character following ‘\’ signals an error.
The substitutions performed by ‘\&’ and ‘\n’ occur after case conversion, if any. Therefore, the strings they substitute are never case-converted.
If subexp is non-nil
, that says to replace just
subexpression number subexp of the regexp that was matched, not
the entire match. For example, after matching ‘foo \(ba*r\)’,
calling replace-match
with 1 as subexp means to replace
just the text that matched ‘\(ba*r\)’.
This function returns the text that would be inserted into the buffer
by replace-match
, but without modifying the buffer. It is
useful if you want to present the user with actual replacement result,
with constructs like ‘\n’ or ‘\&’ substituted with
matched groups. Arguments replacement and optional
fixedcase, literal, string and subexp have the
same meaning as for replace-match
.
Next: Simple Match Data, Up: Match Data [Contents][Index]