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forward-paragraph
: a Goldmine of FunctionsThe forward-paragraph
function moves point forward to the end of the
paragraph. It is usually bound to M-} and makes use of a number of
functions that are important in themselves, including let*
,
match-beginning
, and looking-at
.
The function definition for forward-paragraph
is considerably longer
than the function definition for forward-sentence
because it works
with a paragraph, each line of which may begin with a fill prefix.
A fill prefix consists of a string of characters that are repeated at the beginning of each line. For example, in Lisp code, it is a convention to start each line of a paragraph-long comment with ‘;;; ’. In Text mode, four blank spaces make up another common fill prefix, creating an indented paragraph. (See Fill Prefix in The GNU Emacs Manual, for more information about fill prefixes.)
The existence of a fill prefix means that in addition to being able to find
the end of a paragraph whose lines begin on the left-most column, the
forward-paragraph
function must be able to find the end of a
paragraph when all or many of the lines in the buffer begin with the fill
prefix.
Moreover, it is sometimes practical to ignore a fill prefix that exists, especially when blank lines separate paragraphs. This is an added complication.
• forward-paragraph in brief | Key parts of the function definition. | |
• fwd-para let | The let* expression.
| |
• fwd-para while | The forward motion while loop.
|
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