\input texinfo @comment %**start of header @setfilename auctex.info @include version.texi @settitle AUCTeX @value{VERSION} @c footnotestyle separate @c paragraphindent 2 @comment %**end of header @include macros.texi @copying This manual is for @AUCTeX{} (version @value{VERSION} from @value{UPDATED}), a sophisticated @TeX{} environment for Emacs. Copyright @copyright{} 1992-1995, 2001, 2002, 2004-2021 Free Software Foundation, Inc. @quotation Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled ``GNU Free Documentation License.'' @end quotation @end copying @dircategory Emacs @direntry * AUCTeX: (auctex). A sophisticated TeX environment for Emacs. @end direntry @dircategory TeX @direntry * AUCTeX: (auctex). A sophisticated TeX environment for Emacs. @end direntry @iftex @tolerance 10000 @emergencystretch 3em @end iftex @finalout @titlepage @title @AUCTeX{} @subtitle A sophisticated @TeX{} environment for Emacs @subtitle Version @value{VERSION}, @value{UPDATED} @author Kresten Krab Thorup @author Per Abrahamsen @author David Kastrup and others @page @vskip 0pt plus 1filll @insertcopying @end titlepage @c Use @ifinfo _and_ @ifhtml here because Texinfo 3 cannot cope with @c @ifnottex around a top node. @ifinfo @node top @top @AUCTeX{} This manual may be copied under the conditions spelled out in @ref{Copying this Manual}. @end ifinfo @ifhtml @node top @top @AUCTeX{} @insertcopying @end ifhtml @contents @iftex @unnumbered Executive Summary @end iftex @AUCTeX{} is an integrated environment for editing @LaTeX{}, @ConTeXt{}, doc@TeX{}, Texinfo, and @TeX{} files. Although @AUCTeX{} contains a large number of features, there are no reasons to despair. You can continue to write @TeX{} and @LaTeX{} documents the way you are used to, and only start using the multiple features in small steps. @AUCTeX{} is not monolithic, each feature described in this manual is useful by itself, but together they provide an environment where you will make very few @LaTeX{} errors, and makes it easy to find the errors that may slip through anyway. It is a good idea to make a printout of @AUCTeX{}'s reference card @file{tex-ref.tex} or one of its typeset versions. If you want to make @AUCTeX{} aware of style files and multi-file documents right away, insert the following in your init file (usually @file{~/.emacs.d/init.el}). @lisp (setq TeX-auto-save t) (setq TeX-parse-self t) (setq-default TeX-master nil) @end lisp Another thing you should enable is Ref@TeX{}, a comprehensive solution for managing cross references, bibliographies, indices, document navigation and a few other things. (@xref{Installation,,,reftex,The Ref@TeX{} manual}.) For detailed information about the @previewlatex{} subsystem of @AUCTeX{}, see @ref{Top,,Introduction,preview-latex,The @previewlatex{} Manual}. There is a mailing list for general discussion about @AUCTeX{}: write a mail with ``subscribe'' in the subject to @email{auctex-request@@gnu.org} to join it. Send contributions to @email{auctex@@gnu.org}. Bug reports should go to @email{bug-auctex@@gnu.org}, suggestions for new features, and pleas for help should go to either @email{auctex-devel@@gnu.org} (the @AUCTeX{} developers), or to @email{auctex@@gnu.org} if they might have general interest. Please use the command @kbd{M-x TeX-submit-bug-report @key{RET}} to report bugs if possible. You can subscribe to a low-volume announcement list by sending ``subscribe'' in the subject of a mail to @email{info-auctex-request@@gnu.org}. @menu * Copying:: Copying * Introduction:: Introduction to @AUCTeX{} * Editing:: Editing the Document Source * Display:: Controlling Screen Display * Processing:: Starting Processors, Viewers and Other Programs * Customization:: Customization and Extension * Appendices:: Copying, Changes, Development, FAQ, Texinfo mode * Indices:: Indices @detailmenu --- The Detailed Node Listing --- Introduction * Summary:: Overview of @AUCTeX{} * Installation:: Installing @AUCTeX{} * Quick Start:: Quick Start Editing the Document Source * Quotes:: Inserting double quotes * Font Specifiers:: Inserting Font Specifiers * Sectioning:: Inserting chapters, sections, etc. * Environments:: Inserting Environment Templates * Mathematics:: Entering Mathematics * Completion:: Completion of macros * Commenting:: Commenting text * Indenting:: Reflecting syntactic constructs with whitespace * Filling:: Automatic and manual line breaking Inserting Environment Templates * Equations:: Equations * Floats:: Floats * Itemize-like:: Itemize-like Environments * Tabular-like:: Tabular-like Environments * Customizing Environments:: Customizing Environments Controlling Screen Display * Font Locking:: Font Locking * Folding:: Folding Macros and Environments * Outline:: Outlining the Document * Narrowing:: Restricting display and editing to a portion of the buffer * Prettifying:: Displaying Greek and math macros as Unicode characters Font Locking * Fontification of macros:: Fontification of macros * Fontification of quotes:: Fontification of quotes * Fontification of math:: Fontification of math constructs * Verbatim content:: Verbatim macros and environments * Faces:: Faces used by font-latex * Known problems:: Known fontification problems Starting Processors, Viewers and Other Programs * Commands:: Invoking external commands. * Viewing:: Invoking external viewers. * Debugging:: Debugging @TeX{} and @LaTeX{} output. * Checking:: Checking the document. * Control:: Controlling the processes. * Cleaning:: Cleaning intermediate and output files. * Documentation:: Documentation about macros and packages. Viewing the Formatted Output * Starting Viewers:: Starting viewers * I/O Correlation:: Forward and inverse search Catching the errors * Ignoring warnings:: Controlling warnings to be reported * Error overview:: List of all errors and warnings Customization and Extension * Multifile:: Multifile Documents * Parsing Files:: Automatic Parsing of @TeX{} Files * Internationalization:: Language Support * Automatic:: Automatic Customization * Style Files:: Writing Your Own Style Support Language Support * European:: Using @AUCTeX{} with European Languages * Japanese:: Using @AUCTeX{} with Japanese Automatic Customization * Automatic Global:: Automatic Customization for the Site * Automatic Private:: Automatic Customization for a User * Automatic Local:: Automatic Customization for a Directory Writing Your Own Style Support * Simple Style:: A Simple Style File * Adding Macros:: Adding Support for Macros * Adding Environments:: Adding Support for Environments * Adding Other:: Adding or Examining Other Information * Hacking the Parser:: Automatic Extraction of New Things Copying, Changes, Development, FAQ * Copying this Manual:: * Changes:: * Development:: * FAQ:: * Texinfo mode:: Copying this Manual * GNU Free Documentation License:: License for copying this manual. Indices * Key Index:: * Function Index:: * Variable Index:: * Concept Index:: @end detailmenu @end menu @node Copying @unnumbered Copying @cindex Copying @cindex Copyright @cindex GPL @cindex General Public License @cindex License @cindex Free @cindex Free software @cindex Distribution @cindex Right @cindex Warranty @c This text adapted from the Texinfo 2.16 distribution. @AUCTeX{} primarily consists of Lisp files for Emacs, but there are also installation scripts and files and @TeX{} support files. All of those are @dfn{free}; this means that everyone is free to use them and free to redistribute them on a free basis. The files of @AUCTeX{} are not in the public domain; they are copyrighted and there are restrictions on their distribution, but these restrictions are designed to permit everything that a good cooperating citizen would want to do. What is not allowed is to try to prevent others from further sharing any version of these programs that they might get from you. Specifically, we want to make sure that you have the right to give away copies of the files that constitute @AUCTeX{}, that you receive source code or else can get it if you want it, that you can change these files or use pieces of them in new free programs, and that you know you can do these things. To make sure that everyone has such rights, we have to forbid you to deprive anyone else of these rights. For example, if you distribute copies of parts of @AUCTeX{}, you must give the recipients all the rights that you have. You must make sure that they, too, receive or can get the source code. And you must tell them their rights. Also, for our own protection, we must make certain that everyone finds out that there is no warranty for @AUCTeX{}. If any parts are modified by someone else and passed on, we want their recipients to know that what they have is not what we distributed, so that any problems introduced by others will not reflect on our reputation. The precise conditions of the licenses for the files currently being distributed as part of @AUCTeX{} are found in the General Public Licenses that accompany them. This manual specifically is covered by the GNU Free Documentation License (@pxref{Copying this Manual}). @node Introduction @chapter Introduction @menu * Summary:: Overview of @AUCTeX{} * Installation:: Installing @AUCTeX{} * Quick Start:: Quick Start @end menu @lowersections @include intro.texi @include install.texi @include quickstart.texi @raisesections @node Editing @chapter Editing the Document Source The most commonly used commands/macros of @AUCTeX{} are those which simply insert templates for often used @TeX{}, @LaTeX{}, or @ConTeXt{} constructs, like font changes, handling of environments, etc. These features are very simple, and easy to learn, and help you avoid mistakes like mismatched braces, or @samp{\begin@{@}}-@samp{\end@{@}} pairs. Apart from that this chapter contains a description of some features for entering more specialized sorts of text, for formatting the source by indenting and filling and for navigating through the document. @menu * Quotes:: Inserting quotes, dollars, and braces * Font Specifiers:: Inserting Font Specifiers * Sectioning:: Inserting chapters, sections, etc. * Environments:: Inserting Environment Templates * Mathematics:: Entering Mathematics * Completion:: Completion of macros * Marking:: Marking Environments, Sections, or Texinfo Nodes * Commenting:: Commenting text * Indenting:: Reflecting syntactic constructs with whitespace * Filling:: Automatic and manual line breaking @end menu @node Quotes @section Insertion of Quotes, Dollars, and Braces @cindex Quotes @cindex Double quotes @cindex Braces @cindex Brackets @cindex Dollars @cindex Math mode delimiters @cindex Matching dollar signs @cindex Display math mode @subheading Quotation Marks In @TeX{}, literal double quotes @samp{"like this"} are seldom used, instead two single quotes are used @samp{``like this''}. To help you insert these efficiently, @AUCTeX{} allows you to continue to press @kbd{"} to insert two single quotes. To get a literal double quote, press @kbd{"} twice. @deffn Command TeX-insert-quote @var{count} @kindex " (@kbd{"}) Insert the appropriate quote marks for @TeX{}. Inserts the value of @code{TeX-open-quote} (normally @samp{``}) or @code{TeX-close-quote} (normally @samp{''}) depending on the context. With prefix argument, always inserts @samp{"} characters. @end deffn @defopt TeX-open-quote String inserted by typing @kbd{"} to open a quotation. (@xref{European}, for language-specific quotation mark insertion.) @end defopt @defopt TeX-close-quote String inserted by typing @kbd{"} to close a quotation. (@xref{European}, for language-specific quotation mark insertion.) @end defopt @defopt TeX-quote-after-quote Determines the behavior of @kbd{"}. If it is non-nil, typing @kbd{"} will insert a literal double quote. The respective values of @code{TeX-open-quote} and @code{TeX-close-quote} will be inserted after typing @kbd{"} once again. @end defopt The @samp{babel} package provides special support for the requirements of typesetting quotation marks in many different languages. If you use this package, either directly or by loading a language-specific style file, you should also use the special commands for quote insertion instead of the standard quotes shown above. @AUCTeX{} is able to recognize several of these languages and will change quote insertion accordingly. @xref{European}, for details about this feature and how to control it. @vindex LaTeX-csquotes-open-quote @vindex LaTeX-csquotes-close-quote @vindex LaTeX-csquotes-quote-after-quote In case you are using the @samp{csquotes} package, you should customize @code{LaTeX-csquotes-open-quote}, @code{LaTeX-csquotes-close-quote} and @code{LaTeX-csquotes-quote-after-quote}. The quotation characters will only be used if both variables---@code{LaTeX-csquotes-open-quote} and @code{LaTeX-csquotes-close-quote}---are non-empty strings. But then the @samp{csquotes}-related values will take precedence over the language-specific ones. @subheading Dollar Signs In @AUCTeX{}, dollar signs should match like they do in @TeX{}. This has been partially implemented, we assume dollar signs always match within a paragraph. By default, the first @samp{$} you insert in a paragraph will do nothing special. The second @samp{$} will match the first. This will be indicated by moving the cursor temporarily over the first dollar sign. @deffn Command TeX-insert-dollar @var{arg} @kindex $ (@kbd{$}) Insert dollar sign. Show matching dollar sign if this dollar sign end the @TeX{} math mode. With optional @var{arg}, insert that many dollar signs. @end deffn @TeX{} and @LaTeX{} users often look for a way to insert inline equations like @samp{$...$} or @samp{\(...\)} simply typing @kbd{$}. @AUCTeX{} helps them through the customizable variable @code{TeX-electric-math}. @defopt TeX-electric-math If the variable is non-nil and you type @kbd{$} outside math mode, @AUCTeX{} will automatically insert the opening and closing symbols for an inline equation and put the point between them. The opening symbol will blink when @code{blink-matching-paren} is non-nil. If @code{TeX-electric-math} is nil, typing @kbd{$} simply inserts @samp{$} at point, this is the default. Besides @code{nil}, possible values for this variable are @code{(cons "$" "$")} for @TeX{} inline equations @samp{$...$}, and @code{(cons "\\(" "\\)")} for @LaTeX{} inline equations @samp{\(...\)}. If the variable is non-nil and point is inside math mode right between a couple of single dollars, pressing @kbd{$} will insert another pair of dollar signs and leave the point between them. Thus, if @code{TeX-electric-math} is set to @code{(cons "$" "$")} you can easily obtain a @TeX{} display equation @samp{$$...$$} by pressing @kbd{$} twice in a row. (Note that you should not use double dollar signs in @LaTeX{} because this practice can lead to wrong spacing in typeset documents.) In addition, when the variable is non-nil and there is an active region outside math mode, typing @kbd{$} will put around the active region symbols for opening and closing inline equation and keep the region active, leaving point after the closing symbol. By pressing repeatedly @kbd{$} while the region is active you can toggle between an inline equation, a display equation, and no equation. To be precise, @samp{$...$} is replaced by @samp{$$...$$}, whereas @samp{\(...\)} is replaced by @samp{\[...\]}. @end defopt If you want to automatically insert @samp{$...$} in plain @TeX{} files, and @samp{\(...\)} in @LaTeX{} files by pressing @kbd{$}, add the following to your init file @lisp (add-hook 'plain-TeX-mode-hook (lambda () (set (make-local-variable 'TeX-electric-math) (cons "$" "$")))) (add-hook 'LaTeX-mode-hook (lambda () (set (make-local-variable 'TeX-electric-math) (cons "\\(" "\\)")))) @end lisp Note that Texinfo mode does nothing special for @kbd{$}. It inserts dollar sign(s) just in the same way as the other normal keys do. @subheading Braces To avoid unbalanced braces, it is useful to insert them pairwise. You can do this by typing @kbd{C-c @{}. @deffn Command TeX-insert-braces @kindex C-c @{ (@kbd{C-c @{}) Make a pair of braces and position the cursor to type inside of them. If there is an active region, put braces around it and leave point after the closing brace. @end deffn When writing complex math formulas in @LaTeX{} documents, you sometimes need to adjust the size of braces with pairs of macros like @samp{\left}-@samp{\right}, @samp{\bigl}-@samp{\bigr} and so on. You can avoid unbalanced pairs with the help of @code{TeX-insert-macro}, bound to @kbd{C-c C-m} or @kbd{C-c @key{RET}} (@pxref{Completion}). If you insert left size adjusting macros such as @samp{\left}, @samp{\bigl} etc.@: with @code{TeX-insert-macro}, it asks for left brace to use and supplies automatically right size adjusting macros such as @samp{\right}, @samp{\bigr} etc.@: and corresponding right brace in addtion to the intended left macro and left brace. The completion by @code{TeX-insert-macro} also applies when entering macros such as @samp{\langle}, @samp{\lfloor} and @samp{\lceil}, which produce the left part of the paired braces. For example, inserting @samp{\lfloor} by @kbd{C-c C-m} is immediately followed by the insertion of @samp{\rfloor}. In addition, if the point was located just after @samp{\left} or its friends, the corresponding @samp{\right} etc.@: will be inserted in front of @samp{\rfloor}. In both cases, active region is honored. As a side effect, when @code{LaTeX-math-mode} (@pxref{Mathematics}) is on, just typing @kbd{`(} inserts not only @samp{\langle}, but also @samp{\rangle}. If you do not like such auto completion at all, it can be disabled by a user option. @defopt TeX-arg-right-insert-p If this option is turned off, the automatic supply of the right macros and braces is suppressed. @end defopt @kindex ( @kindex @{ @kindex [ When you edit @LaTeX{} documents, you can enable automatic brace pairing when typing @kbd{(}, @kbd{@{} and @kbd{[}. @defopt LaTeX-electric-left-right-brace If this option is on, just typing @kbd{(}, @kbd{@{} or @kbd{[} immediately adds the corresponding right brace @samp{)}, @samp{@}} or @samp{]}. The point is left after the opening brace. If there is an active region, braces are put around it. They recognize the preceding backslash or size adjusting macros such as @samp{\left}, @samp{\bigl} etc., so the following completions will occur: @itemize @bullet @item (when typing single left brace) @itemize @minus @item @samp{(} -> @samp{()} @item @samp{@{} -> @samp{@{@}} @item @samp{[} -> @samp{[]} @end itemize @item (when typing left brace just after a backslash) @itemize @minus @item @samp{\(} -> @samp{\(\)} @item @samp{\@{} -> @samp{\@{\@}} @item @samp{\[} -> @samp{\[\]} @end itemize @item (when typing just after @samp{\left} or @samp{\bigl}) @itemize @minus @item @samp{\left(} -> @samp{\left(\right)} @item @samp{\bigl[} -> @samp{\bigl[\bigr]} @end itemize @item (when typing just after @samp{\Bigl\}) @itemize @minus @item @samp{\Bigl\@{} -> @samp{\Bigl\@{\Bigr\@}} @end itemize @end itemize This auto completion feature may be a bit annoying when editing an already existing @LaTeX{} document. In that case, use @kbd{C-u 1} or @kbd{C-q} before typing @kbd{(}, @kbd{@{} or @kbd{[}. Then no completion is done and just a single left brace is inserted. In fact, with optional prefix @var{arg}, just that many open braces are inserted without any completion. @end defopt @node Font Specifiers @section Inserting Font Specifiers @cindex Fonts @cindex Font macros @cindex Changing font @cindex Specifying a font Perhaps the most used keyboard commands of @AUCTeX{} are the short-cuts available for easy insertion of font changing macros. If you give an argument (that is, type @kbd{C-u}) to the font command, the innermost font will be replaced, i.e.@: the font in the @TeX{} group around point will be changed. The following table shows the available commands, with @code{@point{}} indicating the position where the text will be inserted. @table @kbd @item C-c C-f C-b @kindex C-c C-f C-b @cindex @code{\textbf} Insert @b{bold face} @samp{\textbf@{@point{}@}} text. @item C-c C-f C-m @kindex C-c C-f C-m @cindex @code{\textmd} Insert @r{medium face} @samp{\textmd@{@point{}@}} text. @item C-c C-f C-i @kindex C-c C-f C-i @cindex @code{\textit} Insert @i{italics} @samp{\textit@{@point{}@}} text. @item C-c C-f C-e @kindex C-c C-f C-e @cindex @code{\emph} Insert @emph{emphasized} @samp{\emph@{@point{}@}} text. @item C-c C-f C-s @kindex C-c C-f C-s @cindex @code{\textsl} Insert @slanted{slanted} @samp{\textsl@{@point{}@}} text. @item C-c C-f C-r @kindex C-c C-f C-r @cindex @code{\textrm} Insert @r{roman} @samp{\textrm@{@point{}@}} text. @item C-c C-f C-f @kindex C-c C-f C-f @cindex @code{\textsf} Insert @sansserif{sans serif} @samp{\textsf@{@point{}@}} text. @item C-c C-f C-t @kindex C-c C-f C-t @cindex @code{\texttt} Insert @t{typewriter} @samp{\texttt@{@point{}@}} text. @item C-c C-f C-c @kindex C-c C-f C-c @cindex @code{\textsc} Insert @sc{small caps} @samp{\textsc@{@point{}@}} text. @item C-c C-f C-l @kindex C-c C-f C-l @cindex @code{\textulc} Insert upper lower case @samp{\textulc@{@point{}@}} text. @item C-c C-f C-w @kindex C-c C-f C-w @cindex @code{\textsw} Insert @sc{swash} @samp{\textsw@{@point{}@}} text. @item C-c C-f C-n @kindex C-c C-f C-n @cindex @code{\textnormal} Insert normal @samp{\textnormal@{@point{}@}} text. @item C-c C-f C-d @kindex C-c C-f C-c @cindex Deleting fonts Delete the innermost font specification containing point. @end table @deffn Command TeX-font @var{replace} @var{what} @kindex C-c C-f (@kbd{C-c C-f}) Insert template for font change command. If @var{replace} is not nil, replace current font. @var{what} determines the font to use, as specified by @code{TeX-font-list}. @end deffn @defopt TeX-font-list List of fonts used by @code{TeX-font}. Each entry is a list with three elements. The first element is the key to activate the font. The second element is the string to insert before point, and the third element is the string to insert after point. An optional fourth element means always replace if not nil. @end defopt @defopt LaTeX-font-list List of fonts used by @code{TeX-font} in LaTeX mode. It has the same structure as @code{TeX-font-list}. @end defopt @node Sectioning @section Inserting chapters, sections, etc. @cindex Sectioning @cindex Sections @cindex Chapters @cindex @code{\chapter} @cindex @code{\section} @cindex @code{\subsection} @cindex @code{\label} Insertion of sectioning macros, that is @samp{\chapter}, @samp{\section}, @samp{\subsection}, etc.@: and accompanying @samp{\label}'s may be eased by using @kbd{C-c C-s}. This command is highly customizable, the following describes the default behavior. When invoking you will be asked for a section macro to insert. An appropriate default is automatically selected by @AUCTeX{}, that is either: at the top of the document; the top level sectioning for that document style, and any other place: The same as the last occurring sectioning command. Next, you will be asked for the actual name of that section, and last you will be asked for a label to be associated with that section. The label will be prefixed by the value specified in @code{LaTeX-section-hook}. @deffn Command LaTeX-section @var{arg} @kindex C-c C-s (@kbd{C-c C-s}) Insert a sectioning command. Determine the type of section to be inserted, by the argument @var{arg}. @itemize @bullet @item If @var{arg} is nil or missing, use the current level. @item If @var{arg} is a list (selected by C-u), go downward one level. @item If @var{arg} is negative, go up that many levels. @item If @var{arg} is positive or zero, use absolute level: @itemize + @item 0 : part @item 1 : chapter @item 2 : section @item 3 : subsection @item 4 : subsubsection @item 5 : paragraph @item 6 : subparagraph @end itemize @end itemize The following variables can be set to customize the function. @vtable @code @item LaTeX-section-hook Hooks to be run when inserting a section. @item LaTeX-section-label Prefix to all section references. @end vtable @end deffn The precise behavior of @code{LaTeX-section} is defined by the contents of @code{LaTeX-section-hook}. @defopt LaTeX-section-hook List of hooks to run when a new section is inserted. The following variables are set before the hooks are run @vtable @code @item LaTeX-level Numeric section level, default set by prefix arg to @code{LaTeX-section}. @item LaTeX-name Name of the sectioning command, derived from @code{LaTeX-level}. @item LaTeX-title The title of the section, default to an empty string. @item LaTeX-toc Entry for the table of contents list, default nil. @item LaTeX-done-mark Position of point afterwards, default nil meaning after the inserted text. @end vtable A number of hooks are already defined. Most likely, you will be able to get the desired functionality by choosing from these hooks. @ftable @code @item LaTeX-section-heading Query the user about the name of the sectioning command. Modifies @code{LaTeX-level} and @code{LaTeX-name}. @item LaTeX-section-title Query the user about the title of the section. Modifies @code{LaTeX-title}. @item LaTeX-section-toc Query the user for the toc entry. Modifies @code{LaTeX-toc}. @item LaTeX-section-section Insert @LaTeX{} section command according to @code{LaTeX-name}, @code{LaTeX-title}, and @code{LaTeX-toc}. If @code{LaTeX-toc} is nil, no toc entry is inserted. If @code{LaTeX-toc} or @code{LaTeX-title} are empty strings, @code{LaTeX-done-mark} will be placed at the point they should be inserted. @item LaTeX-section-label Insert a label after the section command. Controlled by the variable @code{LaTeX-section-label}. @end ftable To get a full featured @code{LaTeX-section} command, insert @lisp (setq LaTeX-section-hook '(LaTeX-section-heading LaTeX-section-title LaTeX-section-toc LaTeX-section-section LaTeX-section-label)) @end lisp in your init file such as @file{init.el} or @file{.emacs}. @end defopt The behavior of @code{LaTeX-section-label} is determined by the variable @code{LaTeX-section-label}. @defopt LaTeX-section-label Default prefix when asking for a label. If it is a string, it is used unchanged for all kinds of sections. If it is nil, no label is inserted. If it is a list, the list is searched for a member whose car is equal to the name of the sectioning command being inserted. The cdr is then used as the prefix. If the name is not found, or if the cdr is nil, no label is inserted. @cindex Prefix for labels @cindex Label prefix @cindex Labels By default, chapters have a prefix of @samp{cha:} while sections and subsections have a prefix of @samp{sec:}. Labels are not automatically inserted for other types of sections. @end defopt @node Environments @section Inserting Environment Templates @cindex Environments @cindex @samp{\begin} @cindex @samp{\end} A large apparatus is available that supports insertions of environments, that is @samp{\begin@{@}} --- @samp{\end@{@}} pairs. @AUCTeX{} is aware of most of the actual environments available in a specific document. This is achieved by examining your @samp{\documentclass} command, and consulting a precompiled list of environments available in a large number of styles. Most of these are described further in the following sections, and you may easily specify more. @xref{Customizing Environments}. You insert an environment with @kbd{C-c C-e}, and select an environment type. Depending on the environment, @AUCTeX{} may ask more questions about the optional parts of the selected environment type. With @kbd{C-u C-c C-e} you will change the current environment. @deffn Command LaTeX-environment @var{arg} @kindex C-c C-e (@kbd{C-c C-e}) @AUCTeX{} will prompt you for an environment to insert. At this prompt, you may press @key{TAB} or @key{SPC} to complete a partially written name, and/or to get a list of available environments. After selection of a specific environment @AUCTeX{} may prompt you for further specifications. If the optional argument @var{arg} is non-nil (i.e.@: you have given a prefix argument), the current environment is modified and no new environment is inserted. @end deffn @AUCTeX{} helps you adding labels to environments which use them, such as @samp{equation}, @samp{figure}, @samp{table}, etc@dots{} When you insert one of the supported environments with @kbd{C-c C-e}, you will be automatically prompted for a label. You can select the prefix to be used for such environments with the @code{LaTeX-label-alist} variable. @defopt LaTeX-label-alist List the prefixes to be used for the label of each supported environment. This is an alist whose car is the environment name, and the cdr either the prefix or a symbol referring to one. If the name is not found, or if the cdr is nil, no label is automatically inserted for that environment. If you want to automatically insert a label for a environment but with an empty prefix, use the empty string @code{""} as the cdr of the corresponding entry. @end defopt As a default selection, @AUCTeX{} will suggest the environment last inserted or, as the first choice the value of the variable @code{LaTeX-default-environment}. @defopt LaTeX-default-environment Default environment to insert when invoking @code{LaTeX-environment} first time. When the current environment is @samp{document}, it is overriden by @code{LaTeX-default-document-environment}. @end defopt @defvar LaTeX-default-document-environment Default environment when invoking @samp{LaTeX-environment} and the current environment is @samp{document}. It is intended to be used in @LaTeX{} class style files. For example, in @file{beamer.el} it is set to @code{frame}, in @file{letter.el} to @code{letter}, and in @file{slides.el} to @code{slide}. @end defvar If the document is empty, or the cursor is placed at the top of the document, @AUCTeX{} will default to insert a @samp{document} environment prompting also for the insertion of @samp{\documentclass} and @samp{\usepackage} macros. You will be prompted for a new package until you enter nothing. If you do not want to insert any @samp{\usepackage} at all, just press @key{RET} at the first @samp{Packages} prompt. @AUCTeX{} distinguishes normal and expert environments. By default, it will offer completion only for normal environments. This behavior is controlled by the user option @code{TeX-complete-expert-commands}. @defopt TeX-complete-expert-commands Complete macros and environments marked as expert commands. Possible values are nil, t, or a list of style names. @table @asis @item nil Don't complete expert commands (default). @item t Always complete expert commands. @item (@var{styles} @dots{}) Only complete expert commands of @var{styles}. @end table @end defopt @menu * Equations:: Equations * Floats:: Floats * Itemize-like:: Itemize-like Environments * Tabular-like:: Tabular-like Environments * Customizing Environments:: Customizing Environments @end menu You can close the current environment with @kbd{C-c ]}, but we suggest that you use @kbd{C-c C-e} to insert complete environments instead. @deffn Command LaTeX-close-environment @kindex C-c ] (@kbd{C-c ]}) Insert an @samp{\end} that matches the current environment. @end deffn @AUCTeX{} offers keyboard shortcuts for moving point to the beginning and to the end of the current environment. @deffn Command LaTeX-find-matching-begin @kindex C-M-a (@kbd{C-M-a}) Move point to the @samp{\begin} of the current environment. If this command is called inside a comment and @code{LaTeX-syntactic-comments} is enabled, try to find the environment in commented regions with the same comment prefix. @end deffn @deffn Command LaTeX-find-matching-end @kindex C-M-e (@kbd{C-M-e}) Move point to the @samp{\end} of the current environment. If this command is called inside a comment and @code{LaTeX-syntactic-comments} is enabled, try to find the environment in commented regions with the same comment prefix. @end deffn @node Equations @subsection Equations @cindex Equations @cindex Equation @cindex Eqnarray @cindex amsmath When inserting equation-like environments, the @samp{\label} will have a default prefix, which is controlled by the following variables: @defopt LaTeX-equation-label Prefix to use for `equation' labels. @end defopt @defopt LaTeX-eqnarray-label Prefix to use for `eqnarray' labels. @end defopt @defopt LaTeX-amsmath-label Prefix to use for amsmath equation labels. Amsmath equations include @samp{align}, @samp{alignat}, @samp{xalignat}, @samp{multline}, @samp{flalign} and @samp{gather}. @end defopt @node Floats @subsection Floats @cindex Floats @cindex Figures @cindex Figure environment @cindex Tables @cindex Table environment Figures and tables (i.e., floats) may also be inserted using @AUCTeX{}. After choosing either `figure' or `table' in the environment list described above, you will be prompted for a number of additional things. @table @var @item float position This is the optional argument of float environments that controls how they are placed in the final document. In @LaTeX{} this is a sequence of the letters @samp{htbp} as described in the @LaTeX{} manual. The value will default to the value of @code{LaTeX-float}. @vindex LaTeX-float @item caption This is the caption of the float. The default is to insert the caption at the bottom of the float. You can specify floats where the caption should be placed at the top with @code{LaTeX-top-caption-list}. @vindex LaTeX-top-caption-list @item short caption If the specified caption is greater than a specific length, then a short caption is prompted for and it is inserted as an optional argument to the @samp{\caption} macro. The length that a caption needs to be before prompting for a short version is controlled by @code{LaTeX-short-caption-prompt-length}. @vindex LaTeX-short-caption-prompt-length @item label The label of this float. The label will have a default prefix, which is controlled by the variables @code{LaTeX-figure-label} and @code{LaTeX-table-label}. @vindex LaTeX-figure-label @vindex LaTeX-table-label @cindex Prefix for labels @cindex Label prefix @cindex Labels @end table Moreover, you will be asked if you want the contents of the float environment to be horizontally centered. Upon a positive answer a @samp{\centering} macro will be inserted at the beginning of the float environment. @defopt LaTeX-float Default placement for floats. @end defopt @defopt LaTeX-figure-label Prefix to use for figure labels. @end defopt @defopt LaTeX-table-label Prefix to use for table labels. @end defopt @defopt LaTeX-top-caption-list List of float environments with top caption. @end defopt @defopt LaTeX-short-caption-prompt-length Number of chars a caption should be before prompting for a short caption. @end defopt @node Itemize-like @subsection Itemize-like Environments @cindex Itemize @cindex Enumerates @cindex Descriptions @cindex Items @cindex \item In an itemize-like environment, nodes (i.e., @samp{\item}s) may be inserted using @kbd{C-c @key{LFD}}. @deffn Command LaTeX-insert-item @kindex C-c @key{LFD} (@kbd{C-c @key{LFD}}) Close the current item, move to the next line and insert an appropriate @samp{\item} for the current environment. That is, `itemize' and `enumerate' will have @samp{\item } inserted, while `description' will have @samp{\item[] } inserted. @end deffn @defopt TeX-arg-item-label-p If non-nil, you will always be asked for optional label in items. Otherwise, you will be asked only in description environments. @end defopt @node Tabular-like @subsection Tabular-like Environments @cindex amsmath When inserting Tabular-like environments, that is, `tabular' `array' etc., you will be prompted for a template for that environment. Related variables: @defopt LaTeX-default-format Default format string for array and tabular environments. @end defopt @defopt LaTeX-default-width Default width for minipage and tabular* environments. @end defopt @defopt LaTeX-default-position Default position string for array and tabular environments. If nil, act like the empty string is given, but don't prompt for a position. @end defopt @AUCTeX{} calculates the number of columns from the format string and inserts the suitable number of ampersands. You can use @kbd{C-c @key{LFD}} (@code{LaTeX-insert-item}) to terminate rows in these environments. It supplies line break macro @samp{\\} and inserts the suitable number of ampersands on the next line. @AUCTeX{} also supports the @samp{*@{num@}@{cols@}} notation (which may contain another @samp{*}-expression) in the format string when calculating the number of ampersands. Please note that @samp{num} and @samp{cols} must be enclosed in braces; expressions like @samp{*2l} are not recognized correctly by the algorithm. @deffn Command LaTeX-insert-item @kindex C-c @key{LFD} (@kbd{C-c @key{LFD}}) Close the current row with @samp{\\}, move to the next line and insert an appropriate number of ampersands for the current environment. @end deffn Similar supports are provided for various amsmath environments such as @samp{align}, @samp{gather}, @samp{alignat}, @samp{matrix} etc. Try typing @kbd{C-c @key{LFD}} in these environments. It recognizes the current environment and does the appropriate job depending on the context. @node Customizing Environments @subsection Customizing Environments @xref{Adding Environments}, for how to customize the list of known environments. @node Mathematics @section Entering Mathematics @cindex Mathematics @cindex Symbols @cindex Abbreviations @vindex LaTeX-math-default @TeX{} is written by a mathematician, and has always contained good support for formatting mathematical text. @AUCTeX{} supports this tradition, by offering a special minor mode for entering text with many mathematical symbols. You can enter this mode by typing @kbd{C-c ~}. @deffn Command LaTeX-math-mode @kindex C-c ~ (@kbd{C-c ~}) Toggle @LaTeX{} Math mode. This is a minor mode rebinding the key @code{LaTeX-math-abbrev-prefix} to allow easy typing of mathematical symbols. @kbd{`} will read a character from the keyboard, and insert the symbol as specified in @code{LaTeX-math-default} and @code{LaTeX-math-list}. If given a prefix argument, the symbol will be surrounded by dollar signs. @end deffn You can use another prefix key (instead of @kbd{`}) by setting the variable @code{LaTeX-math-abbrev-prefix}. To enable @LaTeX{} Math mode by default, add the following in your init file such as @file{init.el} or @file{.emacs}: @lisp (add-hook 'LaTeX-mode-hook #'LaTeX-math-mode) @end lisp @defopt LaTeX-math-abbrev-prefix A string containing the prefix of @code{LaTeX-math-mode} commands; This value defaults to @kbd{`}. The string has to be a key or key sequence in a format understood by the @code{kbd} macro. This corresponds to the syntax usually used in the manuals for Emacs Lisp. @end defopt The variable @code{LaTeX-math-list} allows you to add your own mappings. @defopt LaTeX-math-list A list containing user-defined keys and commands to be used in @LaTeX{} Math mode. Each entry should be a list of two to four elements. First, the key to be used after @code{LaTeX-math-abbrev-prefix} for macro insertion. If it is nil, the symbol has no associated keystroke (it is available in the menu, though). Second, a string representing the name of the macro (without a leading backslash.) Third, a string representing the name of a submenu the command should be added to. Use a list of strings in case of nested menus. Fourth, the position of a Unicode character to be displayed in the menu alongside the macro name. This is an integer value. @end defopt @defopt LaTeX-math-menu-unicode Whether the @LaTeX{} Math menu should try using Unicode for effect. Your Emacs built must be able to display include Unicode characters in menus for this feature. @end defopt @AUCTeX{}'s reference card @file{tex-ref.tex} includes a list of all math mode commands. @cindex subscript @cindex superscript @kindex _ @kindex ^ @AUCTeX{} can help you write subscripts and superscripts in math constructs by automatically inserting a pair of braces after typing @key{_} or @key{^} respectively and putting point between the braces. In order to enable this feature, set the variable @code{TeX-electric-sub-and-superscript} to a non-nil value. @defopt TeX-electric-sub-and-superscript If non-nil, insert braces after typing @key{^} and @key{_} in math mode. @end defopt @cindex input method You can automatically turn off input methods, used to input non-ascii characters, when you begin to enter math constructs. @defopt TeX-math-input-method-off-regexp Input method matching this regular expression is turned off when @kbd{$} is typed to begin math mode or a math environment is inserted by @kbd{C-c C-e} (@code{LaTeX-environment}). @end defopt @node Completion @section Completion @cindex Completion @cindex Expansion @cindex Macro expansion @cindex Macro completion @cindex Macro arguments @cindex Arguments to @TeX{} macros Emacs lisp programmers probably know the @code{lisp-complete-symbol} command which was bound to @kbd{M-@key{TAB}} until completion-at-point became the new standard completion facility (see below). Users of the wonderful ispell mode know and love the @code{ispell-complete-word} command from that package. Similarly, @AUCTeX{} has a @code{TeX-complete-symbol} command, by default bound to @kbd{M-@key{TAB}} which is equivalent to @kbd{C-M-i}. Using @code{TeX-complete-symbol} makes it easier to type and remember the names of long @LaTeX{} macros. In order to use @code{TeX-complete-symbol}, you should write a backslash and the start of the macro. Typing @kbd{M-@key{TAB}} will now complete as much of the macro, as it unambiguously can. For example, if you type `@samp{\renewc}' and then @kbd{M-@key{TAB}}, it will expand to `@samp{\renewcommand}'. But there's more: if point is just after @samp{\begin@{}, then @code{TeX-complete-symbol} will complete @LaTeX{} environments, etc. This is controlled by @code{TeX-complete-list}. @deffn Command TeX-complete-symbol @kindex M-@key{TAB} (@kbd{M-@key{TAB}}) Complete @TeX{} symbol before point. @end deffn @defvar TeX-complete-list List of ways to complete the preceding text. Each entry is a list with the following elements: @enumerate @item Regexp matching the preceding text or a predicate of arity 0 which returns non-nil and sets `match-data' appropriately if it is applicable. @item A number indicating the subgroup in the regexp containing the text. @item A function returning an alist of possible completions. @item Text to append after a succesful completion. @end enumerate Or alternatively: @enumerate @item Regexp matching the preceding text. @item Function to do the actual completion. @end enumerate @end defvar More recent Emacs versions have a new completion mechanism. Modes may define and register custom @code{completion-at-point} functions and when the user invokes @code{completion-at-point} (usually bound to @kbd{M-@key{TAB}}), all such registered functions are consulted for checking for possible completions. Modern completion UIs like @i{company-mode} support this completion-at-point facility. @defun TeX--completion-at-point @AUCTeX{}'s completion-at-point function which is automatically added to @code{completion-at-point-functions} in @TeX{} and @LaTeX{} buffers. It offers the same completion candidates as would @code{TeX-complete-symbol} (and is also controlled by @code{TeX-complete-list}) except that it doesn't fall back on @code{ispell-complete-word} which would be awkward with completion UIs like @i{company-mode}. @end defun A more direct way to insert a macro is with @code{TeX-insert-macro}, bound to @kbd{C-c C-m} which is equivalent to @kbd{C-c @key{RET}}. It has the advantage over completion that it knows about the argument of most standard @LaTeX{} macros, and will prompt for them. It also knows about the type of the arguments, so it will for example give completion for the argument to @samp{\include}. Some examples are listed below. @deffn Command TeX-insert-macro @kindex C-c C-m (@kbd{C-c C-m} or @kbd{C-c @key{RET}}) Prompt (with completion) for the name of a @TeX{} macro, and if @AUCTeX{} knows the macro, prompt for each argument. @end deffn As a default selection, @AUCTeX{} will suggest the macro last inserted or, as the first choice the value of the variable @code{TeX-default-macro}. @defopt TeX-default-macro Default macro to insert when invoking @code{TeX-insert-macro} first time. @end defopt @defopt TeX-insert-macro-default-style Specifies whether @code{TeX-insert-macro} will ask for all optional arguments. If set to the symbol @code{show-optional-args}, @code{TeX-insert-macro} asks for optional arguments of @TeX{} marcos, unless the previous optional argument has been rejected. If set to @code{show-all-optional-args}, @code{TeX-insert-macro} asks for all optional arguments. @code{mandatory-args-only}, @code{TeX-insert-macro} asks only for mandatory arguments. When @code{TeX-insert-macro} is called with prefix argument (@kbd{C-u}), it's the other way round. @c FIXME: Now that the option has 3 candidates, it isn't clear what "the @c other way round" means. Note that for some macros, there are special mechanisms, e.g.@: @code{LaTeX-includegraphics-options-alist} and @code{TeX-arg-cite-note-p}. @end defopt A faster alternative is to enable the option @code{TeX-electric-escape}. @defopt TeX-electric-escape If this is non-nil, typing the @TeX{} escape character @kbd{\} will invoke the command @code{TeX-electric-macro}. In Texinfo mode, the command is invoked by @kbd{@@} instead. @end defopt The difference between @code{TeX-insert-macro} and @code{TeX-electric-macro} is that space key @key{SPC} will complete and exit from the minibuffer in @code{TeX-electric-macro}. Use @key{TAB} if you merely want to complete. @deffn Command TeX-electric-macro Prompt (with completion) for the name of a @TeX{} macro, and if @AUCTeX{} knows the macro, prompt for each argument. Space (@key{SPC}) will complete and exit. @end deffn By default @AUCTeX{} will put an empty set braces @samp{@{@}} after a macro with no arguments to stop it from eating the next whitespace. This is suppressed inside math mode and can be disabled totally by setting @code{TeX-insert-braces} to nil. @defopt TeX-insert-braces If non-nil, append a empty pair of braces after inserting a macro with no arguments. @end defopt @defopt TeX-insert-braces-alist Control the insertion of a pair of braces after a macro on a per macro basis. This variable is an alist. Each element is a cons cell, whose car is the macro name, and the cdr is non-nil or nil, depending on whether a pair of braces should be, respectively, appended or not to the macro. If a macro has an element in this variable, @AUCTeX{} will use its value to decide what to do, whatever the value of the variable @code{TeX-insert-braces}. @end defopt Completions work because @AUCTeX{} can analyze @TeX{} files, and store symbols in Emacs Lisp files for later retrieval. @xref{Automatic}, for more information. @AUCTeX{} distinguishes normal and expert macros. By default, it will offer completion only for normal commands. This behavior can be controlled using the user option @code{TeX-complete-expert-commands}. @defopt TeX-complete-expert-commands Complete macros and environments marked as expert commands. Possible values are nil, t, or a list of style names. @table @asis @item nil Don't complete expert commands (default). @item t Always complete expert commands. @item (@var{styles} @dots{}) Only complete expert commands of @var{styles}. @end table @end defopt @cindex \cite, completion of @cindex Bib@TeX{}, completion @cindex cite, completion of @cindex bibliography, completion @cindex citations, completion of @cindex \label, completion @cindex \ref, completion @cindex labels, completion of @AUCTeX{} will also make completion for many macro arguments, for example existing labels when you enter a @samp{\ref} macro with @code{TeX-insert-macro} or @code{TeX-electric-macro}, and Bib@TeX{} entries when you enter a @samp{\cite} macro. For this kind of completion to work, parsing must be enabled as described in @ref{Parsing Files}. For @samp{\cite} you must also make sure that the Bib@TeX{} files have been saved at least once after you enabled automatic parsing on save, and that the basename of the Bib@TeX{} file does not conflict with the basename of one of @TeX{} files. @node Marking @section Marking Environments, Sections, or Texinfo Nodes You can mark the current environment by typing @kbd{C-c .}, or the current section by typing @kbd{C-c *}. In Texinfo documents you can type @kbd{C-M-h} to mark the current node. When the region is set, the point is moved to its beginning and the mark to its end. @menu * Marking (LaTeX):: @LaTeX{} Commands for Marking Environments and Sections * Marking (Texinfo):: Texinfo Commands for Marking Environments, Sections, and Nodes @end menu @node Marking (LaTeX) @subsection @LaTeX{} Commands for Marking Environments and Sections @deffn Command LaTeX-mark-section @kindex C-c * (@kbd{C-c *}) Set mark at end of current logical section, and point at top. With a non-nil prefix argument, mark only the region from the current section start to the next sectioning command. Thereby subsections are not being marked. Otherwise, any included subsections are also marked along with current section. @end deffn @deffn Command LaTeX-mark-environment @kindex C-c . (@kbd{C-c .}) Set mark to the end of the current environment and point to the matching beginning. If a prefix argument is given, mark the respective number of enclosing environments. The command will not work properly if there are unbalanced begin-end pairs in comments and verbatim environments. @end deffn @node Marking (Texinfo) @subsection Texinfo Commands for Marking Environments and Sections @deffn Command Texinfo-mark-section @kindex C-c * (@kbd{C-c *}) Mark the current section, with inclusion of any containing node. @vindex outline-regexp @vindex texinfo-section-list The current section is detected as starting by any of the structuring commands matched by the regular expression in the variable @code{outline-regexp} which in turn is a regular expression matching any element of the variable @code{texinfo-section-list}. With a non-nil prefix argument, mark only the region from the current section start to the next sectioning command. Thereby subsections are not being marked. Otherwise, any included subsections are also marked. Note that when the current section is starting immediately after a node command, then the node command is also marked as part of the section. @end deffn @deffn Command Texinfo-mark-environment @kindex C-c . (@kbd{C-c .}) Set mark to the end of the current environment and point to the matching beginning. If a prefix argument is given, mark the respective number of enclosing environments. The command will not work properly if there are unbalanced begin-end pairs in comments and verbatim environments. @end deffn @deffn Command Texinfo-mark-node @kindex C-M-h (@kbd{C-M-h}) Mark the current node. This is the node in which point is located. It is starting at the previous occurrence of the keyword @code{@@node} and ending at next occurrence of the keywords @code{@@node} or @code{@@bye}. @end deffn @node Commenting @section Commenting It is often necessary to comment out temporarily a region of @TeX{} or @LaTeX{} code. This can be done with the commands @kbd{C-c ;} and @kbd{C-c %}. @kbd{C-c ;} will comment out all lines in the current region, while @kbd{C-c %} will comment out the current paragraph. Type @kbd{C-c ;} again to uncomment all lines of a commented region, or @kbd{C-c %} again to uncomment all comment lines around point. These commands will insert or remove a single @samp{%} respectively. @deffn Command TeX-comment-or-uncomment-region @kindex C-c ; (@kbd{C-c ;}) Add or remove @samp{%} from the beginning of each line in the current region. Uncommenting works only if the region encloses solely commented lines. If @AUCTeX{} should not try to guess if the region should be commented or uncommented the commands @code{TeX-comment-region} and @code{TeX-uncomment-region} can be used to explicitly comment or uncomment the region in concern. @end deffn @deffn Command TeX-comment-or-uncomment-paragraph @kindex C-c % (@kbd{C-c %}) Add or remove @samp{%} from the beginning of each line in the current paragraph. When removing @samp{%} characters the paragraph is considered to consist of all preceding and succeeding lines starting with a @samp{%}, until the first non-comment line. @end deffn @node Indenting @section Indenting @cindex Formatting @cindex Indenting @cindex Indentation @cindex Reformatting @cindex Reindenting Indentation means the addition of whitespace at the beginning of lines to reflect special syntactical constructs. This makes it easier to see the structure of the document, and to catch errors such as a missing closing brace. Thus, the indentation is done for precisely the same reasons that you would indent ordinary computer programs. Indentation is done by @LaTeX{} environments and by @TeX{} groups, that is the body of an environment is indented by the value of @code{LaTeX-indent-level} (default 2). Also, items of an `itemize-like' environment are indented by the value of @code{LaTeX-item-indent}, default @minus{}2. (Items are identified with the help of @code{LaTeX-item-regexp}.) If more environments are nested, they are indented `accumulated' just like most programming languages usually are seen indented in nested constructs. @vindex LaTeX-indent-level @vindex LaTeX-item-indent @vindex LaTeX-item-regexp You can explicitely indent single lines, usually by pressing @key{TAB}, or marked regions by calling @code{indent-region} on it. If you have @code{auto-fill-mode} enabled and a line is broken while you type it, Emacs automatically cares about the indentation in the following line. If you want to have a similar behavior upon typing @key{RET}, you can customize the variable @code{TeX-newline-function} and change the default of @code{newline} which does no indentation to @code{newline-and-indent} which indents the new line or @code{reindent-then-newline-and-indent} which indents both the current and the new line. @vindex TeX-newline-function @findex indent-region @cindex auto-fill-mode There are certain @LaTeX{} environments which should be indented in a special way, like @samp{tabular} or @samp{verbatim}. Those environments may be specified in the variable @code{LaTeX-indent-environment-list} together with their special indentation functions. Taking the @samp{verbatim} environment as an example you can see that @code{current-indentation} is used as the indentation function. This will stop @AUCTeX{} from doing any indentation in the environment if you hit @key{TAB} for example. @vindex LaTeX-indent-environment-list There are environments in @code{LaTeX-indent-environment-list} which do not bring a special indentation function with them. This is due to the fact that first the respective functions are not implemented yet and second that filling will be disabled for the specified environments. This shall prevent the source code from being messed up by accidently filling those environments with the standard filling routine. If you think that providing special filling routines for such environments would be an appropriate and challenging task for you, you are invited to contribute. (@xref{Filling}, for further information about the filling functionality.) @vindex LaTeX-indent-environment-list The check for the indentation function may be enabled or disabled by customizing the variable @code{LaTeX-indent-environment-check}. @vindex LaTeX-indent-environment-check @cindex align.el @findex align-current As a side note with regard to formatting special environments: Newer Emacsen include @file{align.el} and therefore provide some support for formatting @samp{tabular} and @samp{tabbing} environments with the function @code{align-current} which will nicely align columns in the source code. @AUCTeX{} is able to format commented parts of your code just as any other part. This means @LaTeX{} environments and @TeX{} groups in comments will be indented syntactically correct if the variable @code{LaTeX-syntactic-comments} is set to t. If you disable it, comments will be filled like normal text and no syntactic indentation will be done. @vindex LaTeX-syntactic-comments Following you will find a list of most commands and variables related to indenting with a small summary in each case: @table @kbd @item @key{TAB} @kindex @key{TAB} @findex LaTeX-indent-line @code{LaTeX-indent-line} will indent the current line. @item @key{LFD} @itemx C-j @kindex @key{LFD} @kindex C-j @code{newline-and-indent} inserts a new line (much like @key{RET}) and moves the cursor to an appropriate position by the left margin. Most keyboards nowadays lack a linefeed key and @kbd{C-j} may be tedious to type. Therefore you can customize @AUCTeX{} to perform indentation upon typing @key{RET} as well. The respective option is called @code{TeX-newline-function}. @end table @defopt LaTeX-indent-environment-list List of environments with special indentation. The second element in each entry is the function to calculate the indentation level in columns. @c FIXME: The situation has changed, hasn't it? The filling code currently cannot handle tabular-like environments which will be completely messed-up if you try to format them. This is why most of these environments are included in this customization option without a special indentation function. This will prevent that they get filled. @end defopt @defopt LaTeX-indent-level Number of spaces to add to the indentation for each @samp{\begin} not matched by a @samp{\end}. @end defopt @defopt LaTeX-item-indent Number of spaces to add to the indentation for @samp{\item}'s in list environments. @end defopt @defopt TeX-brace-indent-level Number of spaces to add to the indentation for each @samp{@{} not matched by a @samp{@}}. @end defopt @defopt LaTeX-syntactic-comments If non-nil comments will be filled and indented according to @LaTeX{} syntax. Otherwise they will be filled like normal text. @end defopt @defopt TeX-newline-function Used to specify the function which is called when @key{RET} is pressed. This will normally be @code{newline} which simply inserts a new line. In case you want to have @AUCTeX{} do indentation as well when you press @key{RET}, use the built-in functions @code{newline-and-indent} or @code{reindent-then-newline-and-indent}. The former inserts a new line and indents the following line, i.e.@: it moves the cursor to the right position and therefore acts as if you pressed @key{LFD}. The latter function additionally indents the current line. If you choose @samp{Other}, you can specify your own fancy function to be called when @key{RET} is pressed. @end defopt @vindex LaTeX-begin-regexp @vindex LaTeX-end-regexp @AUCTeX{} treats by default @samp{\[...\]} math mode as a regular environment and indents it accordingly. If you do not like such behavior you only need to remove @code{\|\[} and @code{\|\]} from @code{LaTeX-begin-regexp} and @code{LaTeX-end-regexp} variables respectively. @node Filling @section Filling @cindex Filling @cindex Formatting @cindex Reformatting @cindex Refilling @findex auto-fill-mode @findex turn-on-auto-fill @vindex fill-column Filling deals with the insertion of line breaks to prevent lines from becoming wider than what is specified in @code{fill-column}. The linebreaks will be inserted automatically if @code{auto-fill-mode} is enabled. In this case the source is not only filled but also indented automatically as you write it. @code{auto-fill-mode} can be enabled for @AUCTeX{} by calling @code{turn-on-auto-fill} in one of the hooks @AUCTeX{} is running. @xref{Modes and Hooks}. As an example, if you want to enable @code{auto-fill-mode} in @code{LaTeX-mode}, put the following into your init file: @lisp (add-hook 'LaTeX-mode-hook #'turn-on-auto-fill) @end lisp You can manually fill explicitely marked regions, paragraphs, environments, complete sections, or the whole buffer. (Note that manual filling in @AUCTeX{} will indent the start of the region to be filled in contrast to many other Emacs modes.) There are some syntactical constructs which are handled specially with regard to filling. These are so-called @dfn{code comments} and @dfn{paragraph commands}. Code comments are comments preceded by code or text in the same line. Upon filling a region, code comments themselves will not get filled. Filling is done from the start of the region to the line with the code comment and continues after it. In order to prevent overfull lines in the source code, a linebreak will be inserted before the last non-comment word by default. This can be changed by customizing @code{LaTeX-fill-break-before-code-comments}. If you have overfull lines with code comments you can fill those explicitely by calling @code{LaTeX-fill-paragraph} or pressing @kbd{M-q} with the cursor positioned on them. This will add linebreaks in the comment and indent subsequent comment lines to the column of the comment in the first line of the code comment. In this special case @kbd{M-q} only acts on the current line and not on the whole paragraph. Lines with @samp{\par} are treated similarly to code comments, i.e.@: @samp{\par} will be treated as paragraph boundary which should not be followed by other code or text. But it is not treated as a real paragraph boundary like an empty line where filling a paragraph would stop. Paragraph commands like @samp{\section} or @samp{\noindent} (the list of commands is defined by @code{LaTeX-paragraph-commands}) are often to be placed in their own line(s). This means they should not be consecuted with any preceding or following adjacent lines of text. @AUCTeX{} will prevent this from happening if you do not put any text except another macro after the end of the last brace of the respective macro. If there is other text after the macro, @AUCTeX{} regards this as a sign that the macro is part of the following paragraph. @vindex LaTeX-paragraph-commands Here are some examples: @example \begin@{quote@} text text text text @end example @example \begin@{quote@}\label@{foo@} text text text text @end example If you press @kbd{M-q} on the first line in both examples, nothing will change. But if you write @example \begin@{quote@} text text text text text @end example @noindent and press @kbd{M-q}, you will get @example \begin@{quote@} text text text text text @end example Besides code comments and paragraph commands, another speciality of filling in @AUCTeX{} involves commented lines. You should be aware that these comments are treated as islands in the rest of the @LaTeX{} code if syntactic filling is enabled. This means, for example, if you try to fill an environment with @code{LaTeX-fill-environment} and have the cursor placed on a commented line which does not have a surrounding environment inside the comment, @AUCTeX{} will report an error. @findex LaTeX-fill-environment The relevant commands and variables with regard to filling are: @table @kbd @item C-c C-q C-p @kindex C-c C-q C-p @findex LaTeX-fill-paragraph @code{LaTeX-fill-paragraph} will fill and indent the current paragraph. @item M-q @kindex M-q Alias for @kbd{C-c C-q C-p} @item C-c C-q C-e @kindex C-c C-q C-e @findex LaTeX-fill-environment @code{LaTeX-fill-environment} will fill and indent the current environment. This may e.g.@: be the `document' environment, in which case the entire document will be formatted. @item C-c C-q C-s @kindex C-c C-q C-s @findex LaTeX-fill-section @code{LaTeX-fill-section} will fill and indent the current logical sectional unit. @item C-c C-q C-r @kindex C-c C-q C-r @findex LaTeX-fill-region @code{LaTeX-fill-region} will fill and indent the current region. @end table @defopt LaTeX-fill-break-at-separators List of separators before or after which respectively linebreaks will be inserted if they do not fit into one line. The separators can be curly braces, brackets, switches for inline math (@samp{$}, @samp{\(}, @samp{\)}) and switches for display math (@samp{\[}, @samp{\]}). Such formatting can be useful to make macros and math more visible or to prevent overfull lines in the @LaTeX{} source in case a package for displaying formatted @TeX{} output inside the Emacs buffer, like preview-latex, is used. @end defopt @defopt LaTeX-fill-break-before-code-comments Code comments are comments preceded by some other text in the same line. When a paragraph containing such a comment is to be filled, the comment start will be seen as a border after which no line breaks will be inserted in the same line. If the option @code{LaTeX-fill-break-before-code-comments} is enabled (which is the default) and the comment does not fit into the line, a line break will be inserted before the last non-comment word to minimize the chance that the line becomes overfull. @end defopt @defopt LaTeX-fill-excluded-macros A list of macro names (without leading backslash) for whose arguments filling should be disabled. Typically, you will want to add macros here which have long, multi-line arguments. An example is @code{\pgfplotstabletypeset} from the pgfplotstable package which is used as shown in the following listing: @verbatim \pgfplotstabletypeset[skip first n=4]{% XYZ Format, Version 1.234 Date 2010-09-01 @author Mustermann A B C 1 2 3 4 5 6 } @end verbatim @end defopt @node Display @chapter Controlling Screen Display It is often desirable to get visual help of what markup code in a text actually does without having to decipher it explicitly. For this purpose Emacs and @AUCTeX{} provide font locking (also known as syntax highlighting) which visually sets off markup code like macros or environments by using different colors or fonts. For example text to be typeset in italics can be displayed with an italic font in the editor as well, or labels and references get their own distinct color. While font locking helps you grasp the purpose of markup code and separate markup from content, the markup code can still be distracting. @AUCTeX{} lets you hide those parts and show them again at request with its built-in support for hiding macros and environments which we call folding here. Besides folding of macros and environments, @AUCTeX{} provides support for Emacs' outline mode which lets you narrow the buffer content to certain sections of your text by hiding the parts not belonging to these sections. Moreover, you can focus in a specific portion of the code by narrowing the buffer to the desired region. @AUCTeX{} provides also functions to narrow the buffer to the current group and to @LaTeX{} environments. @AUCTeX{} also provides some WYSIWYG features. First, you can customize @code{font-latex-fontify-script} to enable special formatting of @code{^} superscripts and @code{_} subscripts (@pxref{Font Locking}). Secondly, @AUCTeX{} with GNU Emacs 25 or later can display certain math macros using Unicode characters, e.g., @code{\alpha} as α. This is called prettification and is lightweight and reasonable robust (@pxref{Prettifying}). A more accurate approach is provided by @previewlatex{}, a subsystem of @AUCTeX{}, see @ref{Top,,Introduction,preview-latex,The @previewlatex{} Manual}. This system uses @LaTeX{} to generate images that are then displayed in your buffer. It is extremely accurate but can be fragile with some packages (like older pgf versions). Please note that you can use prettification and @previewlatex{} together. @menu * Font Locking:: Font Locking * Folding:: Folding Macros and Environments * Outline:: Outlining the Document * Narrowing:: Restricting display and editing to a portion of the buffer * Prettifying:: Displaying Greek and math macros as Unicode characters @end menu @node Font Locking @section Font Locking @cindex Font Locking @cindex Syntax Highlighting @cindex font-latex Font locking is supposed to improve readability of the source code by highlighting certain keywords with different colors or fonts. It thereby lets you recognize the function of markup code to a certain extent without having to read the markup command. For general information on controlling font locking with Emacs' Font Lock mode, see @ref{Font Lock, , Font Lock Mode, emacs, GNU Emacs Manual}. @defopt TeX-install-font-lock Once font locking is enabled globally or for the major modes provided by @AUCTeX{}, the font locking patterns and functionality of @fontlatex{} are activated by default. You can switch to a different font locking scheme or disable font locking in @AUCTeX{} by customizing the variable @code{TeX-install-font-lock}. Besides @fontlatex{} @AUCTeX{} ships with a scheme which is derived from Emacs' default @LaTeX{} mode and activated by choosing @code{tex-font-setup}. Be aware that this scheme is not coupled with @AUCTeX{}'s style system and not the focus of development. Therefore and due to @fontlatex{} being much more feature-rich the following explanations will only cover @fontlatex{}. In case you want to hook in your own fontification scheme, you can choose @code{other} and insert the name of the function which sets up your font locking patterns. If you want to disable fontification in @AUCTeX{} completely, choose @code{ignore}. @end defopt @fontlatex{} provides many options for customization which are accessible with @kbd{M-x customize-group @key{RET} font-latex @key{RET}}. For this description the various options are explained in conceptional groups. @menu * Fontification of macros:: Fontification of macros * Fontification of quotes:: Fontification of quotes * Fontification of math:: Fontification of math constructs * Verbatim content:: Verbatim macros and environments * Faces:: Faces used by font-latex * Known problems:: Known fontification problems @end menu @node Fontification of macros @subsection Fontification of macros Highlighting of macros can be customized by adapting keyword lists which can be found in the customization group @code{font-latex-keywords}. Three types of macros can be handled differently with respect to fontification: @enumerate @item Commands of the form @samp{\foo[bar]@{baz@}} which consist of the macro itself, optional arguments in square brackets and mandatory arguments in curly braces. For the command itself the face @code{font-lock-keyword-face} will be used and for the optional arguments the face @code{font-lock-variable-name-face}. The face applied to the mandatory argument depends on the macro class represented by the respective built-in variables. @item Declaration macros of the form @samp{@{\foo text@}} which consist of the macro which may be enclosed in a @TeX{} group together with text to be affected by the macro. In case a @TeX{} group is present, the macro will get the face @code{font-lock-keyword-face} and the text will get the face configured for the respective macro class. If no @TeX{} group is present, the latter face will be applied to the macro itself. @item Simple macros of the form @samp{\foo} which do not have any arguments or groupings. The respective face will be applied to the macro itself. @end enumerate Customization variables for @samp{\foo[bar]@{baz@}} type macros allow both the macro name and the sequence of arguments to be specified. The latter is done with a string which can contain the characters @table @samp @item * indicating the existence of a starred variant for the macro, @item [ for optional arguments in brackets, @item @{ for mandatory arguments in braces, @item \ for mandatory arguments consisting of a single macro and @item | as a prefix indicating that two alternatives are following. @end table For example the specifier for @samp{\documentclass} would be @samp{[@{} because the macro has one optional followed by one mandatory argument. The specifier for @samp{\newcommand} would be @samp{*|@{\[[@{} because there is a starred variant, the mandatory argument following the macro name can be a macro or a @TeX{} group which can be followed by two optional arguments and the last token is a mandatory argument in braces. Customization variables for the @samp{@{\foo text@}} and @samp{\foo} types are simple lists of strings where each entry is a macro name (without the leading backslash). @subheading General macro classes @fontlatex{} provides keyword lists for different macro classes which are described in the following table: @vindex font-latex-match-function-keywords @vindex font-latex-match-reference-keywords @vindex font-latex-match-textual-keywords @vindex font-latex-match-variable-keywords @vindex font-latex-match-warning-keywords @table @code @item font-latex-match-function-keywords Keywords for macros defining or related to functions, like @samp{\newcommand}.@* Type: @samp{\macro[...]@{...@}}@* Face: @code{font-lock-function-name-face} @item font-latex-match-reference-keywords Keywords for macros defining or related to references, like @samp{\ref}.@* Type: @samp{\macro[...]@{...@}}@* Face: @code{font-lock-constant-face} @item font-latex-match-textual-keywords Keywords for macros specifying textual content, like @samp{\caption}.@* Type: @samp{\macro[...]@{...@}}@* Face: @code{font-lock-type-face} @item font-latex-match-variable-keywords Keywords for macros defining or related to variables, like @samp{\setlength}.@* Type: @samp{\macro[...]@{...@}}@* Face: @code{font-lock-variable-name-face} @item font-latex-match-warning-keywords Keywords for important macros, e.g.@: affecting line or page break, like @samp{\clearpage}.@* Type: @samp{\macro}@* Face: @code{font-latex-warning-face} @end table @subheading Sectioning commands @cindex Sectioning commands, fontification of Sectioning commands are macros like @samp{\chapter} or @samp{\section}. For these commands there are two fontification schemes which may be selected by customizing the variable @code{font-latex-fontify-sectioning}. @defopt font-latex-fontify-sectioning @c FIXME: Is @vindex correct? @vindex font-latex-sectioning-0-face @vindex font-latex-sectioning-1-face @vindex font-latex-sectioning-2-face @vindex font-latex-sectioning-3-face @vindex font-latex-sectioning-4-face @vindex font-latex-sectioning-5-face Per default sectioning commands will be shown in a larger, proportional font, which corresponds to a number for this variable. The font size varies with the sectioning level, e.g.@: @samp{\part} (@code{font-latex-sectioning-0-face}) has a larger font than @samp{\paragraph} (@code{font-latex-sectioning-5-face}). Typically, values from 1.05 to 1.3 for @code{font-latex-fontify-sectioning} give best results, depending on your font setup. If you rather like to use the base font and a different color, set the variable to the symbol @samp{color}. In this case the face @code{font-lock-type-face} will be used to fontify the argument of the sectioning commands. @end defopt @vindex font-latex-match-sectioning-0-keywords @vindex font-latex-match-sectioning-1-keywords @vindex font-latex-match-sectioning-2-keywords @vindex font-latex-match-sectioning-3-keywords @vindex font-latex-match-sectioning-4-keywords @vindex font-latex-match-sectioning-5-keywords You can make @fontlatex{} aware of your own sectioning commands be adding them to the keyword lists: @code{font-latex-match-sectioning-0-keywords} (@code{font-latex-sectioning-0-face}) @dots{} @code{font-latex-match-sectioning-5-keywords} (@code{font-latex-sectioning-5-face}). @vindex font-latex-slide-title-face @vindex font-latex-match-slide-title-keywords Related to sectioning there is special support for slide titles which may be fontified with the face @code{font-latex-slide-title-face}. You can add macros which should appear in this face by customizing the variable @code{font-latex-match-slide-title-keywords}. @subheading Commands for changing fonts @LaTeX{} provides various macros for changing fonts or font attributes. For example, you can select an italic font with @samp{\textit@{...@}} or bold with @samp{\textbf@{...@}}. An alternative way to specify these fonts is to use special macros in @TeX{} groups, like @samp{@{\itshape ...@}} for italics and @samp{@{\bfseries ...@}} for bold. As mentioned above, we call the former variants commands and the latter declarations. Besides the macros for changing fonts provided by @LaTeX{} there is an infinite number of other macros---either defined by yourself for logical markup or defined by macro packages---which affect the font in the typeset text. While @LaTeX{}'s built-in macros and macros of packages known by @AUCTeX{} are already handled by @fontlatex{}, different keyword lists per type style and macro type are provided for entering your own macros which are listed in the table below. @vindex font-latex-match-bold-command-keywords @vindex font-latex-match-italic-command-keywords @vindex font-latex-match-math-command-keywords @vindex font-latex-match-type-command-keywords @vindex font-latex-match-bold-declaration-keywords @vindex font-latex-match-italic-declaration-keywords @vindex font-latex-match-type-declaration-keywords @table @code @item font-latex-match-bold-command-keywords Keywords for commands specifying a bold type style.@* Face: @code{font-latex-bold-face} @item font-latex-match-italic-command-keywords Keywords for commands specifying an italic font.@* Face: @code{font-latex-italic-face} @item font-latex-match-math-command-keywords Keywords for commands specifying a math font.@* Face: @code{font-latex-math-face} @item font-latex-match-type-command-keywords Keywords for commands specifying a typewriter font.@* Face: @code{font-lock-type-face} @item font-latex-match-bold-declaration-keywords Keywords for declarations specifying a bold type style.@* Face: @code{font-latex-bold-face} @item font-latex-match-italic-declaration-keywords Keywords for declarations specifying an italic font.@* Face: @code{font-latex-italic-face} @item font-latex-match-type-declaration-keywords Keywords for declarations specifying a typewriter font.@* Face: @code{font-latex-type-face} @end table @subheading Deactivating defaults of built-in keyword classes @vindex font-latex-deactivated-keyword-classes @fontlatex{} ships with predefined lists of keywords for the classes described above. You can disable these defaults per class by customizing the variable @code{font-latex-deactivated-keyword-classes}. This is a list of strings for keyword classes to be deactivated. Valid entries are "warning", "variable", "biblatexnoarg", "biblatex", "reference", "function" , "sectioning-0", "sectioning-1", "sectioning-2", "sectioning-3", "sectioning-4", "sectioning-5", "slide-title", "textual", "bold-command", "italic-command", "math-command", "type-command", "bold-declaration", "italic-declaration", "type-declaration". You can also get rid of certain keywords only. For example if you want to remove highlighting of footnotes as references you can put the following stanza into your init file: @lisp (eval-after-load "font-latex" '(setq-default font-latex-match-reference-keywords-local (remove (assoc-string "footnote" font-latex-match-reference-keywords-local) font-latex-match-reference-keywords-local))) @end lisp But note that this means fiddling with @fontlatex{}'s internals and is not guaranteed to work in future versions of @fontlatex{}. @subheading User-defined keyword classes In case the customization options explained above do not suffice for your needs, you can specify your own keyword classes by customizing the variable @code{font-latex-user-keyword-classes}. @defopt font-latex-user-keyword-classes Every keyword class consists of four parts, a name, a list of keywords, a face and a specifier for the type of macros to be highlighted. When adding new entries, you have to use unique values for the class names, i.e.@: they must not clash with names of the built-in keyword classes or other names given by you. Additionally the names must not contain spaces. The list of keywords defines which commands and declarations should be covered by the keyword class. A keyword can either be a simple command name omitting the leading backslash or a list consisting of the command name and a string specifying the sequence of arguments for the command. The face argument can either be an existing face or face attributes made by you. There are three alternatives for the type of keywords---``Command with arguments'', ``Declaration inside @TeX{} group'' and ``Command without arguments''---which correspond with the macro types explained above. @end defopt @node Fontification of quotes @subsection Fontification of quotes @cindex Quotes, fontification of Text in quotation marks is displayed with the face @code{font-latex-string-face}. Besides the various forms of opening and closing double and single quotation marks, so-called guillemets (<<, >>) can be used for quoting. Because there are two styles of using them---French style: << text >>; German style: >>text<<---you can customize the variable @code{font-latex-quotes} to tell @fontlatex{} which type you are using if the correct value cannot be derived from document properties. @defopt font-latex-quotes The default value of @code{font-latex-quotes} is @samp{auto} which means that @fontlatex{} will try to derive the correct type of quotation mark matching from document properties like the language option supplied to the babel @LaTeX{} package. If the automatic detection fails for you and you mostly use one specific style you can set it to a specific language-dependent value as well. Set the value to @samp{german} if you are using >>German quotes<< and to @samp{french} if you are using << French quotes >>. @fontlatex{} will recognize the different ways these quotes can be given in your source code, i.e.@: (@samp{"<}, @samp{">}), (@samp{<<}, @samp{>>}) and the respective 8-bit variants. If you set @code{font-latex-quotes} to nil, quoted content will not be fontified. @end defopt @node Fontification of math @subsection Fontification of mathematical constructs @cindex Math, fontification of @cindex Subscript, fontification of @cindex Superscript, fontification of @vindex font-latex-match-math-command-keywords @vindex font-latex-math-environments @vindex texmathp-tex-commands @vindex texmathp-tex-commands-default In @LaTeX{} mathematics can be indicated by a variety of different methods: toggles (like dollar signs), macros and environments. Math constructs known by @fontlatex{} are displayed with the face @code{font-latex-math-face}. Support for dollar signs and shorthands like @samp{\(...\)} or @samp{\[...\]} is built-in and not customizable. Support for other math macros and environments can be adapted by customizing the variables @code{font-latex-match-math-command-keywords} and @code{texmathp-tex-commands} respectively. It is no longer recommended to customize @code{font-latex-math-environments}. To convert your customization in @code{font-latex-math-environments} into @code{texmathp-tex-commands}, please register your own math environments, together with starred variants if any, as entries of @code{env-on} type in @code{texmathp-tex-commands}, then clear out @code{font-latex-math-environments}. You have to restart Emacs for this new customization to take effect for fontification. In order to make math constructs more readable, @fontlatex{} displays subscript and superscript parts in a smaller font and raised or lowered respectively. This fontification feature can be controlled with the variables @code{font-latex-fontify-script} and @code{font-latex-script-display}. @defopt font-latex-fontify-script If non-nil, fontify subscript and superscript strings. Concretely, this means that the scripts are raised or lowered. Another possiblity is setting this variable to the symbol @code{multi-level}. In this case, in a formula @i{x^@{y^z@}}, @i{y} is raised above and smaller than @i{x}, and @i{z} is raised above and smaller than @i{y}. With many script levels, the text might become too small to be readable. (See @code{font-latex-fontify-script-max-level} below.) Lastly, you can set this variable to @code{invisible} whose behavior is like @code{multi-level}, and in addition the super-/subscript characters @i{^} and @i{_} are not displayed. @end defopt @vindex font-latex-superscript-face @vindex font-latex-subscript-face @defopt font-latex-fontify-script-max-level Maximum scriptification level for which script faces are applied. The faces @code{font-latex-superscript-face} and @code{font-latex-subscript-face} define custom @code{:height} values < 1.0. Therefore, scripts are displayed with a slightly smaller font than normal math text. If @code{font-latex-fontify-script} is @code{multi-level} or @code{invisible}, the font size becomes too small to be readable after a few levels. This option allows to specify the maximum level after which the size of the script text won’t be shrunken anymore. For example, in the expression @i{x^@{y^@{z^a_b@}@}}, @i{x} has scriptification level 0, @i{y} has level 1, @i{z} has level 2, and both @i{a} and @i{b} have scriptification level 3. If @code{font-latex-fontify-script-max-level} was 2, then @i{z}, @i{a}, and @i{b} would have the same font size. If it was 3 or more, then @i{a} and @i{b} were smaller than @i{z} just in the same way as @i{z} is smaller than @i{y} and @i{y} is smaller than @i{x}. @end defopt @vindex font-latex-script-char-face The script characters @samp{^} and @samp{_} themselves are also fontified with an own face named @code{font-latex-script-char-face}. @defopt font-latex-script-display Display specification for subscript and superscript content. The car is used for subscript, the cdr is used for superscript. The feature is implemented using so-called display properties. For information on what exactly to specify for the values, see @ref{Other Display Specs, , Other Display Specifications, elisp, GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}. @end defopt @node Verbatim content @subsection Verbatim macros and environments @cindex Verbatim, fontification of Usually it is not desirable to have content to be typeset verbatim highlighted according to @LaTeX{} syntax. Therefore this content will be fontified uniformly with the face @code{font-latex-verbatim-face}. @vindex LaTeX-verbatim-macros-with-delims @vindex LaTeX-verbatim-macros-with-braces @vindex LaTeX-verbatim-environments @fontlatex{} differentiates three different types of verbatim constructs for fontification. Macros with special characters like | as delimiters, macros with braces, and environments. Which macros and environments are recognized is controlled by the variables @code{LaTeX-verbatim-macros-with-delims}, @code{LaTeX-verbatim-macros-with-braces}, and @code{LaTeX-verbatim-environments} respectively. @node Faces @subsection Faces used by @fontlatex{} @cindex Faces In case you want to change the colors and fonts used by @fontlatex{} please refer to the faces mentioned in the explanations above and use @kbd{M-x customize-face @key{RET} @key{RET}}. All faces defined by @fontlatex{} are accessible through a customization group by typing @kbd{M-x customize-group @key{RET} font-latex-highlighting-faces @key{RET}}. @node Known problems @subsection Known fontification problems @cindex Dollar signs, color bleed with @cindex Math, fontification problems with In certain cases the fontification machinery fails to interpret buffer contents correctly. This can lead to color bleed, i.e.@: large parts of a buffer get fontified with an inappropriate face. A typical situation for this to happen is the use of a dollar sign (@samp{$}) in a verbatim macro or environment. If @fontlatex{} is not aware of the verbatim construct, it assumes the dollar sign to be a toggle for mathematics and fontifies the following buffer content with the respective face until it finds a closing dollar sign or till the end of the buffer. As a remedy you can make the verbatim construct known to @fontlatex{} (@pxref{Verbatim content}). If this is not possible, you can insert a commented dollar sign (@samp{%$}) at the next suitable end of line as a quick workaround. In docTeX documents, @samp{^^A$} is also available for similar purpose. @node Folding @section Folding Macros and Environments @cindex Outlining @cindex Folding @cindex Reveal @cindex Auto-Reveal @cindex Hide Macros A popular complaint about markup languages like @TeX{} and @LaTeX{} is that there is too much clutter in the source text and that one cannot focus well on the content. There are macros where you are only interested in the content they are enclosing, like font specifiers where the content might already be fontified in a special way by font locking. Or macros the content of which you only want to see when actually editing it, like footnotes or citations. Similarly you might find certain environments or comments distracting when trying to concentrate on the body of your document. With @AUCTeX{}'s folding functionality you can collapse those items and replace them by a fixed string, the content of one of their arguments, or a mixture of both. If you want to make the original text visible again in order to view or edit it, move point sideways onto the placeholder (also called display string) or left-click with the mouse pointer on it. The macro or environment will unfold automatically, stay open as long as point is inside of it and collapse again once you move point out of it. (Note that folding of environments currently does not work in every @AUCTeX{} mode.) In order to use this feature, you have to activate @code{TeX-fold-mode} which will activate the auto-reveal feature and the necessary commands to hide and show macros and environments. You can activate the mode in a certain buffer by typing the command @kbd{M-x TeX-fold-mode @key{RET}} or using the keyboard shortcut @kbd{C-c C-o C-f}. If you want to use it every time you edit a @LaTeX{} document, add it to a hook: @findex TeX-fold-mode @kindex C-c C-o C-f @lisp (add-hook 'LaTeX-mode-hook (lambda () (TeX-fold-mode 1))) @end lisp If it should be activated in all @AUCTeX{} modes, use @code{TeX-mode-hook} instead of @code{LaTeX-mode-hook}. Once the mode is active there are several commands available to hide and show macros, environments and comments: @deffn Command TeX-fold-buffer @kindex C-c C-o C-b (@kbd{C-c C-o C-b}) Hide all foldable items in the current buffer according to the setting of @code{TeX-fold-type-list}. If you want to have this done automatically every time you open a file, add it to a hook and make sure the function is called after font locking is set up for the buffer. The following code should accomplish this: @lisp (add-hook 'find-file-hook #'TeX-fold-buffer t) @end lisp The command can be used any time to refresh the whole buffer and fold any new macros and environments which were inserted after the last invocation of the command. @end deffn @defopt TeX-fold-type-list List of symbols determining the item classes to consider for folding. This can be macros, environments and comments. Per default only macros and environments are folded. @end defopt @defopt TeX-fold-force-fontify In order for all folded content to get the right faces, the whole buffer has to be fontified before folding is carried out. @code{TeX-fold-buffer} therefore will force fontification of unfontified regions. As this will prolong the time folding takes, you can prevent forced fontification by customizing the variable @code{TeX-fold-force-fontify}. @end defopt @defopt TeX-fold-auto By default, a macro inserted with @code{TeX-insert-macro} (@kbd{C-c C-m}) will not be folded. Set this variable to a non-nil value to aumatically fold macros as soon as they are inserted. @end defopt @defopt TeX-fold-preserve-comments By default items found in comments will be folded. If your comments often contain unfinished code this might lead to problems. Give this variable a non-nil value and foldable items in your comments will be left alone. @end defopt @defopt TeX-fold-unfold-around-mark When this variable is non-nil and there is an active regione, text around the mark will be kept unfolded. @end defopt @deffn Command TeX-fold-region @kindex C-c C-o C-r (@kbd{C-c C-o C-r}) Hide all configured macros in the marked region. @end deffn @deffn Command TeX-fold-paragraph @kindex C-c C-o C-p (@kbd{C-c C-o C-p}) Hide all configured macros in the paragraph containing point. @end deffn @deffn Command TeX-fold-macro @kindex C-c C-o C-m (@kbd{C-c C-o C-m}) Hide the macro on which point currently is located. If the name of the macro is found in @code{TeX-fold-macro-spec-list}, the respective display string will be shown instead. If it is not found, the name of the macro in sqare brackets or the default string for unspecified macros (@code{TeX-fold-unspec-macro-display-string}) will be shown, depending on the value of the variable @code{TeX-fold-unspec-use-name}. @end deffn @deffn Command TeX-fold-env @kindex C-c C-o C-e (@kbd{C-c C-o C-e}) Hide the environment on which point currently is located. The behavior regarding the display string is analogous to @code{TeX-fold-macro} and determined by the variables @code{TeX-fold-env-spec-list} and @code{TeX-fold-unspec-env-display-string} respectively. @end deffn @deffn Command TeX-fold-math Hide the math macro on which point currently is located. If the name of the macro is found in @code{TeX-fold-math-spec-list}, the respective display string will be shown instead. If it is not found, the name of the macro in sqare brackets or the default string for unspecified macros (@code{TeX-fold-unspec-macro-display-string}) will be shown, depending on the value of the variable @code{TeX-fold-unspec-use-name}. @end deffn @deffn Command TeX-fold-comment @kindex C-c C-o C-c (@kbd{C-c C-o C-c}) Hide the comment point is located on. @end deffn @deffn Command TeX-fold-clearout-buffer @kindex C-c C-o b (@kbd{C-c C-o b}) Permanently unfold all macros and environments in the current buffer. @end deffn @deffn Command TeX-fold-clearout-region @kindex C-c C-o r (@kbd{C-c C-o r}) Permanently unfold all macros and environments in the marked region. @end deffn @deffn Command TeX-fold-clearout-paragraph @kindex C-c C-o p (@kbd{C-c C-o p}) Permanently unfold all macros and environments in the paragraph containing point. @end deffn @deffn Command TeX-fold-clearout-item @kindex C-c C-o i (@kbd{C-c C-o i}) Permanently show the macro or environment on which point currently is located. In contrast to temporarily opening the macro when point is moved sideways onto it, the macro will be permanently unfolded and will not collapse again once point is leaving it. @end deffn @deffn Command TeX-fold-dwim @kindex C-c C-o C-o (@kbd{C-c C-o C-o}) Hide or show items according to the current context. If there is folded content, unfold it. If there is a marked region, fold all configured content in this region. If there is no folded content but a macro or environment, fold it. @end deffn @vindex TeX-fold-command-prefix In case you want to use a different prefix than @kbd{C-c C-o} for these commands you can customize the variable @code{TeX-fold-command-prefix}. (Note that this will not change the key binding for activating the mode.) The commands above will only take macros or environments into consideration which are specified in the variables @code{TeX-fold-macro-spec-list} or @code{TeX-fold-env-spec-list} respectively. @defopt TeX-fold-macro-spec-list List of replacement specifiers and macros to fold. The specifier can be a string, an integer or a function symbol. If you specify a string, it will be used as a display replacement for the whole macro. Numbers in braces, brackets, parens or angle brackets will be replaced by the respective macro argument. For example @samp{@{1@}} will be replaced by the first mandatory argument of the macro. One can also define alternatives within the specifier which are used if an argument is not found. Alternatives are separated by @samp{||}. They are most useful with optional arguments. As an example, the default specifier for @samp{\item} is @samp{[1]:||*} which means that if there is an optional argument, its value is shown followed by a colon. If there is no optional argument, only an asterisk is used as the display string. If you specify a number as the first element, the content of the respective mandatory argument of a @LaTeX{} macro will be used as the placeholder. If the first element is a function symbol, the function will be called with all mandatory arguments of the macro and the result of the function call will be used as a replacement for the macro. The placeholder is made by copying the text from the buffer together with its properties, i.e.@: its face as well. If fontification has not happened when this is done (e.g.@: because of lazy font locking) the intended fontification will not show up. As a workaround you can leave Emacs idle a few seconds and wait for stealth font locking to finish before you fold the buffer. Or you just re-fold the buffer with @code{TeX-fold-buffer} when you notice a wrong fontification. @end defopt @defopt TeX-fold-env-spec-list List of display strings or argument numbers and environments to fold. Argument numbers refer to the @samp{\begin} statement. That means if you have e.g.@: @samp{\begin@{tabularx@}@{\linewidth@}@{XXX@} ... \end@{tabularx@}} and specify 3 as the argument number, the resulting display string will be ``XXX''. @end defopt @defopt TeX-fold-math-spec-list List of display strings and math macros to fold. @end defopt @vindex LaTeX-fold-macro-spec-list @vindex LaTeX-fold-env-spec-list @vindex LaTeX-fold-math-spec-list The variables @code{TeX-fold-macro-spec-list}, @code{TeX-fold-env-spec-list}, and @code{TeX-fold-math-spec-list} apply to any @AUCTeX{} mode. If you want to make settings which are only applied to @LaTeX{} mode, you can use the mode-specific variables @code{LaTeX-fold-macro-spec-list}, @code{LaTeX-fold-env-spec-list}, and @code{LaTeX-fold-math-spec-list} @defopt TeX-fold-unspec-macro-display-string Default display string for macros which are not specified in @code{TeX-fold-macro-spec-list}. @end defopt @defopt TeX-fold-unspec-env-display-string Default display string for environments which are not specified in @code{TeX-fold-env-spec-list}. @end defopt @defopt TeX-fold-unspec-use-name If non-nil the name of the macro or environment surrounded by square brackets is used as display string, otherwise the defaults specified in @code{TeX-fold-unspec-macro-display-string} or @code{TeX-fold-unspec-env-display-string} respectively. @end defopt When you hover with the mouse pointer over folded content, its original text will be shown in a tooltip or the echo area depending on Tooltip mode being activate. In order to avoid exorbitantly big tooltips and to cater for the limited space in the echo area the content will be cropped after a certain amount of characters defined by the variable @code{TeX-fold-help-echo-max-length}. @defopt TeX-fold-help-echo-max-length Maximum length of original text displayed in a tooltip or the echo area for folded content. Set it to zero in order to disable this feature. @end defopt @node Outline @section Outlining the Document @cindex Outlining @cindex Headers @cindex Sections @cindex Overview @cindex Folding @AUCTeX{} supports the standard outline minor mode using @LaTeX{}/@ConTeXt{} sectioning commands as header lines. @xref{Outline Mode, , Outline Mode, emacs, GNU Emacs Manual}. You can add your own headings by setting the variable @code{TeX-outline-extra}. @defvar TeX-outline-extra List of extra @TeX{} outline levels. Each element is a list with two entries. The first entry is the regular expression matching a header, and the second is the level of the header. A @samp{^} is automatically prepended to the regular expressions in the list, so they must match text at the beginning of the line. See @code{LaTeX-section-list} or @code{ConTeXt-INTERFACE-section-list} for existing header levels. @end defvar The following example add @samp{\item} and @samp{\bibliography} headers, with @samp{\bibliography} at the same outline level as @samp{\section}, and @samp{\item} being below @samp{\subparagraph}. @lisp (setq TeX-outline-extra '(("[ \t]*\\\\\\(bib\\)?item\\b" 7) ("\\\\bibliography\\b" 2))) @end lisp @c FIXME: Isn't this much outdated? You may want to check out the unbundled @file{out-xtra} package for even better outline support. It is available from your favorite emacs lisp archive. @node Narrowing @section Narrowing Sometimes you want to focus your attention to a limited region of the code. You can do that by restricting the text addressable by editing commands and hiding the rest of the buffer with the narrowing functions, @pxref{Narrowing,,,emacs,GNU Emacs Manual}. In addition, @AUCTeX{} provides a couple of other commands to narrow the buffer to a group, i.e.@: a region enclosed in a pair of curly braces, and to @LaTeX{} environments. @deffn Command TeX-narrow-to-group @kindex C-x n g (@kbd{C-x n g}) Make text outside current group invisible. @end deffn @deffn Command LaTeX-narrow-to-environment @var{count} @kindex C-x n e (@kbd{C-x n e}) Make text outside current environment invisible. With optional argument @var{count} keep visible that number of enclosing environmens. @end deffn Like other standard narrowing functions, the above commands are disabled. Attempting to use them asks for confirmation and gives you the option of enabling them; if you enable the commands, confirmation will no longer be required for them. @node Prettifying @section Prettifying Emacs 25 is able to prettify symbols in programming language buffers, @pxref{Misc for Programs,,,emacs,GNU Emacs Manual}. The canonical example is to display @code{(lambda () ...)} as @code{(λ () ...)} in Lisp buffers. @AUCTeX{} can use this feature in order to display certain math macros and greek letters using their Unicode representation, too. For example, the @TeX{} code @code{\alpha \times \beta} will be displayed as @code{α × β}. When point is on one of the characters, it'll be unprettified automatically, meaning you see the verbatim text again. For this behaviour however you need to set @code{prettify-symbols-unprettify-at-point} to t or @code{right-edge} which will unprettify the symbol when point moves into or near it. To enable prettification in @AUCTeX{}, simply add @code{prettify-symbols-mode} to @code{TeX-mode-hook}. If you enabled prettification globally with @code{global-prettify-symbols-mode}, then it's automatically enabled in @AUCTeX{}, too. You can also add custom symbol unicode-character pairs for prettification by adding to @code{tex--prettify-symbols-alist}. Note that this variable is part of Emacs' stock @code{tex-mode.el} and used by that and @AUCTeX{}. @node Processing @chapter Starting Processors, Viewers and Other Programs The most powerful features of @AUCTeX{} may be those allowing you to run @TeX{}, @LaTeX{}, @ConTeXt{} and other external commands like Bib@TeX{} and @command{makeindex} from within Emacs, viewing and printing the results, and moreover allowing you to @emph{debug} your documents. @cindex tool bar, toolbar @vindex LaTeX-enable-toolbar @vindex plain-TeX-enable-toolbar @vindex TeX-bar-TeX-buttons @vindex TeX-bar-TeX-all-button-alists @vindex TeX-bar-LaTeX-buttons @vindex TeX-bar-LaTeX-button-alist @AUCTeX{} comes with a special tool bar for @TeX{} and @LaTeX{} which provides buttons for the most important commands. You can enable or disable it by customizing the options @code{plain-TeX-enable-toolbar} and @code{LaTeX-enable-toolbar} in the @code{TeX-tool-bar} customization group. You can also customize the buttons by the options @code{TeX-bar-TeX-buttons}, @code{TeX-bar-TeX-all-button-alists}, @code{TeX-bar-LaTeX-buttons} and @code{TeX-bar-LaTeX-button-alist}. @c FIXME: Write details about customizing tool bar. @menu * Commands:: Invoking external commands. * Viewing:: Invoking external viewers. * Debugging:: Debugging @TeX{} and @LaTeX{} output. * Checking:: Checking the document. * Control:: Controlling the processes. * Cleaning:: Cleaning intermediate and output files. * Documentation:: Documentation about macros and packages. @end menu @node Commands @section Executing Commands @cindex Formatting @cindex Running @LaTeX{} @cindex Running @TeX{} @cindex @LaTeX{} @cindex @TeX{} @cindex Running commands @cindex Default command @cindex Header @cindex Trailer @cindex Setting the header @cindex Setting the trailer @cindex Region @cindex Region file @cindex Setting the default command @cindex Commands @cindex External Commands @cindex Indexing @cindex Making an index @cindex Running @command{makeindex} @cindex @command{makeindex} @cindex Bib@TeX{} @cindex Bibliography @cindex Literature @cindex Running Bib@TeX{} @cindex Making a bibliography @cindex Printing @cindex Writing to a printer Formatting the document with @TeX{}, @LaTeX{} or @ConTeXt{}, viewing with a previewer, printing the document, running Bib@TeX{}, making an index, or checking the document with @command{lacheck} or @command{chktex} all require running an external command. @menu * Starting a Command:: Starting a Command on a Document or Region * Selecting a Command:: Selecting and Executing a Command * Processor Options:: Options for @TeX{} Processors @end menu @node Starting a Command @subsection Starting a Command on a Document or Region There are two ways to run an external command, you can either run it on the current document with @code{TeX-command-master}, or on the current region with @code{TeX-command-region}. A special case of running @TeX{} on a region is @code{TeX-command-buffer} which differs from @code{TeX-command-master} if the current buffer is not its own master file. @deffn Command TeX-command-master @kindex C-c C-c (@kbd{C-c C-c}) Query the user for a command, and run it on the master file associated with the current buffer. The name of the master file is controlled by the variable @code{TeX-master}. The available commands are controlled by the variable @code{TeX-command-list}. @vindex TeX-master @vindex TeX-command-list @end deffn @deffn Command TeX-command-region @kindex C-c C-r (@kbd{C-c C-r}) Query the user for a command, and run it on the contents of the selected region. The region contents are written into the region file, after extracting the header and trailer from the master file. If mark is inactive (which can happen with Transient Mark mode), use the old region. See also the command @code{TeX-pin-region} about how to fix a region. The name of the region file is controlled by the variable @code{TeX-region}. The name of the master file is controlled by the variable @code{TeX-master}. The header is all text up to the line matching the regular expression @code{TeX-header-end}. The trailer is all text from the line matching the regular expression @code{TeX-trailer-start}. The available commands are controlled by the variable @code{TeX-command-list}. @vindex TeX-region @vindex TeX-header-end @vindex TeX-trailer-start @vindex TeX-master @vindex TeX-command-list @end deffn @deffn Command TeX-command-buffer @kindex C-c C-b (@kbd{C-c C-b}) Query the user for a command, and apply it to the contents of the current buffer. The buffer contents are written into the region file, after extracting the header and trailer from the master file. The command is then actually run on the region file. See above for details. @end deffn @deffn Command LaTeX-command-section @kindex C-c C-z (@kbd{C-c C-z}) Query the user for a command, and apply it to the current section (or part, chapter, subsection, paragraph, or subparagraph). What makes the current section is determined by @code{LaTeX-command-section-level} which can be enlarged/shrunken using @code{LaTeX-command-section-change-level} (@kbd{C-c M-z}). The given numeric prefix arg is added to the current value of @code{LaTeX-command-section-level}. By default, @code{LaTeX-command-section-level} is initialized with the current document's @code{LaTeX-largest-level}. The buffer contents are written into the region file, after extracting the header and trailer from the master file. The command is then actually run on the region file. See @code{TeX-command-region} for details. @end deffn It is also possible to compile automatically the whole document until it is ready with a single command: @code{TeX-command-run-all}. @deffn Command TeX-command-run-all @kindex C-c C-a (@kbd{C-c C-a}) Compile the current document until an error occurs or it is finished. If compilation finishes successfully, run the viewer at the end. @end deffn Here are some relevant variables. @defopt TeX-region The name of the file for temporarily storing the text when formatting the current region. @end defopt @defopt TeX-header-end A regular expression matching the end of the header. By default, this is @samp{\begin@{document@}} in @LaTeX{} mode and @samp{%**end of header} in plain @TeX{} mode. @end defopt @defopt TeX-trailer-start A regular expression matching the start of the trailer. By default, this is @samp{\end@{document@}} in @LaTeX{} mode and @samp{\bye} in plain @TeX{} mode. @end defopt If you want to change the values of @code{TeX-header-end} and @code{TeX-trailer-start} you can do this for all files by setting the variables in a mode hook or per file by specifying them as file variables (@pxref{File Variables,,,emacs,The Emacs Editor}). @deffn Command TeX-pin-region @kindex C-c C-t C-r (@kbd{C-c C-t C-r}) If you don't have a mode like Transient Mark mode active, where marks get disabled automatically, the region would need to get properly set before each call to @code{TeX-command-region}. If you fix the current region with @kbd{C-c C-t C-r}, then it will get used for more commands even though mark and point may change. An explicitly activated mark, however, will always define a new region when calling @code{TeX-command-region}. @end deffn @c FIXME: The former half of this paragraph is incorrect. @c - `TeX-(La)TeX-sentinel' depends on `TeX-active-*', which act @c according to the value of `TeX-current-process-region-p'. @c - Both C-c C-c and C-c C-r overwrite `TeX-current-process-region-p'. @c Therefore, if the user types C-c C-r before the process invoked by @c C-c C-c finishes, the sentinel for the latter process doesn't work @c as expected. @AUCTeX{} will allow one process for each document, plus one process for the region file to be active at the same time. Thus, if you are editing @var{n} different documents, you can have @var{n} plus one processes running at the same time. If the last process you started was on the region, the commands described in @ref{Debugging} and @ref{Control} will work on that process, otherwise they will work on the process associated with the current document. @node Selecting a Command @subsection Selecting and Executing a Command Once you started the command selection with @kbd{C-c C-c}, @kbd{C-c C-r} or @kbd{C-c C-b} you will be prompted for the type of command. @AUCTeX{} will try to guess which command is appropriate in the given situation and propose it as default. Usually this is a processor like @samp{TeX} or @samp{LaTeX} if the document was changed or a viewer if the document was just typeset. Other commands can be selected in the minibuffer with completion support by typing @key{TAB}. @vindex TeX-command-list @vindex TeX-expand-list The available commands are defined by the variable @code{TeX-command-list}. Per default it includes commands for typesetting the document (e.g.@: @samp{LaTeX}), for viewing the output (@samp{View}), for printing (@samp{Print}), for generating an index (@samp{Index}) or for spell checking (@samp{Spell}) to name but a few. You can also add your own commands by adding entries to @code{TeX-command-list}. Refer to its doc string for information about its syntax. You might also want to look at @code{TeX-expand-list} to learn about the expanders you can use in @code{TeX-command-list}. Note that the default of the variable occasionally changes. Therefore it is advisable to add to the list rather than overwriting it. You can do this with a call to @code{add-to-list} in your init file. For example, if you wanted to add a command for running a program called @samp{foo} on the master or region file, you could do this with the following form. @lisp (eval-after-load "tex" '(add-to-list 'TeX-command-list '("Foo" "foo %s" TeX-run-command t t :help "Run foo") t)) @end lisp As mentioned before, @AUCTeX{} will try to guess what command you want to invoke. If you want to use another command than @samp{TeX}, @samp{LaTeX} or whatever processor @AUCTeX{} thinks is appropriate for the current mode, set the variable @code{TeX-command-default}. You can do this for all files by setting it in a mode hook or per file by specifying it as a file variable (@pxref{File Variables,,,emacs,The Emacs Editor}). @defopt TeX-command-default The default command to run in this buffer. Must be an entry in @code{TeX-command-list}. @end defopt @cindex Biber @cindex biblatex In case you use biblatex in a document, when automatic parsing is enabled @AUCTeX{} checks the value of @samp{backend} option given to biblatex at load time to decide whether to use Bib@TeX{} or Biber for bibliography processing. Should @AUCTeX{} fail to detect the right backend, you can use the file local @code{LaTeX-biblatex-use-Biber} variable. @defvr Variable LaTeX-biblatex-use-Biber If this boolean variable is set as file local, it tells to @AUCTeX{} whether to use Biber with biblatex. In this case, the autodetection of the biblatex backend will be overridden. You may want to set locally this variable if automatic parsing is not enabled. @end defvr After confirming a command to execute, @AUCTeX{} will try to save any buffers related to the document, and check if the document needs to be reformatted. If the variable @code{TeX-save-query} is non-nil, @AUCTeX{} will query before saving each file. By default @AUCTeX{} will check emacs buffers associated with files in the current directory, in one of the @code{TeX-macro-private} directories, and in the @code{TeX-macro-global} directories. You can change this by setting the variable @code{TeX-check-path}. @defopt TeX-check-path Directory path to search for dependencies. If nil, just check the current file. Used when checking if any files have changed. @end defopt @cindex ispell When performing spell checking on a document or a region (invoked through @AUCTeX{}'s @samp{Spell} command or @kbd{M-x ispell @key{RET}}), you want the spell checking program to skip certain macro arguments and environments, most notably the arguments of referencing macros and the contents of verbatim environments. The skipped parts are controlled by variable @code{ispell-tex-skip-alists} provided by @file{ispell.el}. @AUCTeX{} has a library which can be added to this variable depending on the value of @code{TeX-ispell-extend-skip-list} which is set to @code{t} by default. @defopt TeX-ispell-extend-skip-list This boolean option controls whether @AUCTeX{} activates its extension for skipping certain macro arguments and environments when spell checking. When non-@code{nil}, @AUCTeX{} loads the file @file{tex-ispell.el} and adds its content to @code{ispell-tex-skip-alists}. This library can and will never be complete, but the interface can be used to add selected and private macro names within your init file or on a file local basis. @code{ispell-tex-skip-alists} has the following structure: @lisp (defvar ispell-tex-skip-alists '((;; @r{First list} ("\\\\addcontentsline" ispell-tex-arg-end 2) ("\\\\\\([aA]lph\\|arabic\\)" ispell-tex-arg-end) ("\\\\makebox" ispell-tex-arg-end 0) ("\\\\documentclass" . "\\\\begin@{document@}")) (;; @r{Second list} ("\\(figure\\|table\\)\\*?" ispell-tex-arg-end 0) ("list" ispell-tex-arg-end 2) ("verbatim\\*?" . "\\\\end@{verbatim\\*?@}"))) "Lists of regions to be skipped in TeX mode. First list is used raw. Second list has key placed inside \\begin@{@}.") @end lisp Each item is an alist and the structure of it is described in @code{ispell-skip-region-alist}: @lisp (defvar ispell-skip-region-alist '((...)) "Alist expressing beginning and end of regions not to spell check. The alist key must be a regular expression. Valid forms include: (KEY) - just skip the key. (KEY . REGEXP) - skip to the end of REGEXP. REGEXP may be string or symbol. (KEY REGEXP) - skip to end of REGEXP. REGEXP must be a string. (KEY FUNCTION ARGS) - FUNCTION called with ARGS returns end of region.") @end lisp Let's go through the first list of @code{ispell-tex-skip-alists} line by line: @lisp ("\\\\addcontentsline" ispell-tex-arg-end 2) @end lisp @code{KEY} is the string @code{"\\\\addcontentsline"}, @code{FUNCTION} is @code{ispell-tex-arg-end} called with @code{ARGS}, here @code{2}. @code{ispell-tex-arg-end} is a function provided by @file{ispell.el} which skips as many subsequent optional arguments in square brackets as it sees and then skips @code{ARGS} number of mandatory arguments in braces. Omitting @code{ARGS} means skip @code{1} mandatory argument. In practice, when you have something like this in your document: @example \addcontentsline@{toc@}@{chapter@}@{Some text@} @end example The first two arguments are left out and @samp{Some text} will be spell checked. For the next line @lisp ("\\\\\\([aA]lph\\|arabic\\)" ispell-tex-arg-end) @end lisp the name of the counter as argument is skipped. Next line is @lisp ("\\\\makebox" ispell-tex-arg-end 0) @end lisp where only optional arguments are skipped, the first mandatory argument is checked, e.g. @example \makebox[0pt][l]@{Some text@} @end example Finally, the next line @lisp ("\\\\documentclass" . "\\\\begin@{document@}")) @end lisp ensures that the entire preamble of a document is discarded. Second list works the same; it is more convenient for environments since @code{KEY} is wrapped inside @code{\begin@{@}}. @findex TeX-ispell-skip-setcar @findex TeX-ispell-skip-setcdr @AUCTeX{} provides two functions to add items to car and cdr of @code{ispell-tex-arg-end}, namely @code{TeX-ispell-skip-setcar} and @code{TeX-ispell-skip-setcdr}. The argument of these functions is exactly as in @code{ispell-tex-skip-alists}. Additions can be done via init file, e.g.: @lisp (eval-after-load "tex-ispell" '(progn (TeX-ispell-skip-setcar '(("\\\\mymacro" ispell-tex-arg-end))) (TeX-ispell-skip-setcdr '(("myverbatim" . "\\\\end@{myverbatim@}"))))) @end lisp Another possibility is to use file local additions at the end of your @TeX{} file, e.g.: @example %%% Local Variables: %%% mode: latex %%% TeX-master: t %%% eval: (TeX-ispell-skip-setcar '(("\\\\mymacro" . "@{[-0-9]+@}"))) %%% End: @end example @findex TeX-ispell-tex-arg-end Finally, @AUCTeX{} provides a function called @code{TeX-ispell-tex-arg-end} which sees more arguments than @code{ispell-tex-arg-end}. Refer to its doc string for more information. @end defopt @AUCTeX{} also provides a facility to skip the argument of in-line verbatim macros like @samp{\Verb} from @file{fancyvrb.sty} or @samp{\mintinline} from @file{minted.sty}. Characters delimiting the verbatim text are stored in @code{TeX-ispell-verb-delimiters}. @defopt TeX-ispell-verb-delimiters String with delimiters recognized for in-line verbatim macros. This variable is initialized to @samp{!|#~"*/+^-}. Since this string is used to build a character alternative inside a regular expression, special characters @samp{^} and @samp{-} should come last. Other characters like opening brace @samp{@{}, asterisk @samp{*} or at sign @samp{@@} should be avoided as they are not recognized by @file{font-latex.el}. @end defopt @node Processor Options @subsection Options for @TeX{} Processors There are some options you can customize affecting which processors are invoked or the way this is done and which output they produce as a result. These options control if @acronym{DVI} or @acronym{PDF} output should be produced, if @TeX{} should be started in interactive or nonstop mode, if source specials or a Sync@TeX{} file should be produced for making inverse and forward search possible or which @TeX{} engine should be used instead of regular @TeX{}, like PDF@TeX{}, Omega or Xe@TeX{}, and the style error messages are printed with. @deffn Command TeX-PDF-mode @kindex C-c C-t C-p @vindex TeX-PDF-mode @cindex PDF mode (@kbd{C-c C-t C-p}) This command toggles the @acronym{PDF} mode of @AUCTeX{}, a buffer-local minor mode which is enabled by default. You can customize @code{TeX-PDF-mode} to give it a different default or set it as a file local variable on a per-document basis. This option usually results in calling either PDF@TeX{} or ordinary @TeX{}. @end deffn @defopt TeX-DVI-via-PDFTeX If this is set, @acronym{DVI} will also be produced by calling PDF@TeX{}, setting @code{\pdfoutput=0}. This makes it possible to use PDF@TeX{} features like character protrusion even when producing @acronym{DVI} files. Contemporary @TeX{} distributions do this anyway, so that you need not enable the option within @AUCTeX{}. @end defopt @deffn Command TeX-interactive-mode @kindex C-c C-t C-i @vindex TeX-interactive-mode (@kbd{C-c C-t C-i}) This command toggles the interactive mode of @AUCTeX{}, a global minor mode. You can customize @code{TeX-interactive-mode} to give it a different default. In interactive mode, @TeX{} will pause with an error prompt when errors are encountered and wait for the user to type something. @end deffn @cindex I/O correlation @cindex Sync@TeX{} @cindex Source specials @cindex PDFSync @deffn Command TeX-source-correlate-mode @kindex C-c C-t C-s @vindex TeX-source-correlate-mode (@kbd{C-c C-t C-s}) Toggles support for forward and inverse search. Forward search refers to jumping to the place in the previewed document corresponding to where point is located in the document source and inverse search to the other way round. @xref{I/O Correlation}. You can permanently activate @code{TeX-source-correlate-mode} by customizing the variable @code{TeX-source-correlate-mode}. There is a bunch of customization options for the mode, use @kbd{M-x customize-group @key{RET} TeX-view @key{RET}} to find out more. @vindex TeX-source-correlate-method @AUCTeX{} is aware of three different means to do I/O correlation: source specials (only DVI output), the pdfsync @LaTeX{} package (only PDF output) and Sync@TeX{}. The choice between source specials and Sync@TeX{} can be controlled with the variable @code{TeX-source-correlate-method}. Should you use source specials it has to be stressed @emph{very} strongly however, that source specials can cause differences in page breaks and spacing, can seriously interfere with various packages and should thus @emph{never} be used for the final version of a document. In particular, fine-tuning the page breaks should be done with source specials switched off. @end deffn Sometimes you are requested, by journal rules or packages, to compile the document into @acronym{DVI} output. Thus, if you want a @acronym{PDF} document in the end you can either use Xe@TeX{} engine, see below for information about how to set engines, or compile the document with @command{tex} and then convert to @acronym{PDF} with @command{dvips}--@command{ps2pdf} before viewing it. In addition, current Japanese @TeX{} engines cannot generate @acronym{PDF} directly so they rely on @acronym{DVI}-to-@acronym{PDF} converters. Usually @command{dvipdfmx} command is used for this purpose. You can use the @code{TeX-PDF-from-DVI} variable to let @AUCTeX{} know you want to generate the final @acronym{PDF} by converting a @acronym{DVI} file. @defopt TeX-PDF-from-DVI This option controls if and how to produce a @acronym{PDF} file by converting a @acronym{DVI} file. When @code{TeX-PDF-mode} is non-nil, if @code{TeX-PDF-from-DVI} is non-nil too the document is compiled to @acronym{DVI} instead of @acronym{PDF}. When the document is ready, @kbd{C-c C-c} will suggest to run the converter to @acronym{PDF} or an intermediate format. If non-nil, @code{TeX-PDF-from-DVI} should be the name of the command in @code{TeX-command-list}, as a string, used to convert the @acronym{DVI} file to @acronym{PDF} or to an intermediate format. Values currently supported are: @itemize @item @code{"Dvips"}: the @acronym{DVI} file is converted to @acronym{PS} with @command{dvips}. After successfully running it, @command{ps2pdf} will be the default command to convert the @acronym{PS} file to @acronym{PDF}. @item @code{"Dvipdfmx"}: the @acronym{DVI} file is converted to @acronym{PDF} with @command{dvipdfmx}. @end itemize (case is significant; note the uppercase @samp{D} in both strings) When the @acronym{PDF} file is finally ready, the next suggested command will be @samp{View} to open the viewer. This option can also be set as a file local variable, in order to use this conversion on a per-document basis. Recall the whole sequence of @kbd{C-c C-c} commands can be replaced by the single @kbd{C-c C-a}. @end defopt @AUCTeX{} also allows you to easily select different @TeX{} engines for processing, either by using the entries in the @samp{TeXing Options} submenu below the @samp{Command} menu or by calling the function @code{TeX-engine-set}. These eventually set the variable @code{TeX-engine} which you can also modify directly. @defopt TeX-engine This variable allows you to choose which @TeX{} engine should be used for typesetting the document, i.e.@: the executables which will be used when you invoke the @samp{TeX} or @samp{LaTeX} commands. The value should be one of the symbols defined in @code{TeX-engine-alist-builtin} or @code{TeX-engine-alist}. The symbols @samp{default}, @samp{xetex}, @samp{luatex} and @samp{omega} are available from the built-in list. @end defopt Note that @code{TeX-engine} is buffer-local, so setting the variable directly or via the above mentioned menu or function will not take effect in other buffers. If you want to activate an engine for all @AUCTeX{} modes, set @code{TeX-engine} in your init file, e.g.@: by using @kbd{M-x customize-option @key{RET}}. If you want to activate it for a certain @AUCTeX{} mode only, set the variable in the respective mode hook. If you want to activate it for certain files, set it through file variables (@pxref{File Variables,,,emacs,The Emacs Editor}). @vindex TeX-command @vindex LaTeX-command @vindex TeX-Omega-command @vindex LaTeX-Omega-command @vindex ConTeXt-engine @vindex ConTeXt-Omega-engine @vindex TeX-engine-alist @vindex TeX-engine-alist-builtin Should you need to change the executable names related to the different engine settings, there are some variables you can tweak. Those are @code{TeX-command}, @code{LaTeX-command}, @code{TeX-Omega-command}, @code{LaTeX-Omega-command}, @code{ConTeXt-engine} and @code{ConTeXt-Omega-engine}. The rest of the executables is defined directly in @code{TeX-engine-alist-builtin}. If you want to override an entry from that, add an entry to @code{TeX-engine-alist} that starts with the same symbol as that the entry in the built-in list and specify the executables you want to use instead. You can also add entries to @code{TeX-engine-alist} in order to add support for engines not covered per default. @defopt TeX-engine-alist Alist of @TeX{} engines and associated commands. Each entry is a list with a maximum of five elements. The first element is a symbol used to identify the engine. The second is a string describing the engine. The third is the command to be used for plain @TeX{}. The fourth is the command to be used for @LaTeX{}. The fifth is the command to be used for the @option{--engine} parameter of @ConTeXt{}'s @samp{texexec} program. Each command can either be a variable or a string. An empty string or nil means there is no command available. @end defopt In some systems, Emacs cannot inherit the @env{PATH} environment variable from the shell and thus @AUCTeX{} may not be able to run @TeX{} commands. Before running them, @AUCTeX{} checks if it is able to find those commands and will warn you in case it fails. You can skip this test by changing the option @code{TeX-check-TeX}. @defopt TeX-check-TeX @vindex TeX-command @vindex TeX-check-TeX-command-not-found If non-nil, @AUCTeX{} will check if it is able to find a working @TeX{} distribution before running @TeX{}, @LaTeX{}, @ConTeXt{}, etc. It actually checks if can run @code{TeX-command} command or the shell returns a command not found error. The error code returned by the shell in this case can be set in @code{TeX-check-TeX-command-not-found} option. @end defopt Some @LaTeX{} packages requires the document to be compiled with a specific engine. Notable examples are @samp{fontspec} and @samp{polyglossia} packages, which require Lua@TeX{} and Xe@TeX{} engines. If you try to compile a document which loads one of such packages and the set engine is not one of those allowed you will be asked to select a different engine before running the @LaTeX{} command. If you do not want to be warned by @AUCTeX{} in these cases, customize the option @code{TeX-check-engine}. @defopt TeX-check-engine This boolean option controls whether @AUCTeX{} should check the correct engine has been set before running @LaTeX{} commands. @end defopt As shown above, @AUCTeX{} handles in a special way most of the main options that can be given to the @TeX{} processors. When you need to pass to the @TeX{} processor arbitrary options not handled by @AUCTeX{}, you can use the file local variable @code{TeX-command-extra-options}. @defopt TeX-command-extra-options String with the extra options to be given to the TeX processor. For example, if you need to enable the shell escape feature to compile a document, add the following line to the list of local variables of the source file: @example %%% TeX-command-extra-options: "-shell-escape" @end example By default this option is not safe as a file-local variable because a specially crafted document compiled with shell escape enabled can be used for malicious purposes. @end defopt You can customize @AUCTeX{} to show the processor output as it is produced. @defopt TeX-show-compilation If non-nil, the output of @TeX{} compilation is shown in another window. @end defopt You can instruct @TeX{} to print error messages in the form @samp{file:line:error} which is similar to the way many compilers format them. @defopt TeX-file-line-error If non-nil, @TeX{} will produce @samp{file:line:error} style error messages. @end defopt @ConTeXt{} users can choose between Mark II and Mark IV versions. This is controlled by @code{ConTeXt-Mark-version} option. @defopt ConTeXt-Mark-version This variables specifies which version of Mark should be used. Values currently supported are @code{"II"}, the default, and @code{"IV"}. It can be set globally using customization interface or on a per-file basis, by specifying it as a file variable. @end defopt @node Viewing @section Viewing the Formatted Output @cindex Viewing @cindex Previewing @cindex Starting a previewer @AUCTeX{} allows you to start external programs for previewing the formatted output of your document. @menu * Starting Viewers:: Starting viewers * I/O Correlation:: Forward and inverse search @end menu @node Starting Viewers @subsection Starting Viewers Viewers are normally invoked by pressing @kbd{C-c C-c} once the document is formatted, which will propose the @samp{View} command, or by activating the respective entry in the Command menu. Alternatively you can type @kbd{C-c C-v} which calls the function @code{TeX-view}. @deffn Command TeX-view @kindex C-c C-v (@kbd{C-c C-v}) Start a viewer without confirmation. The viewer is started either on a region or the master file, depending on the last command issued. This is especially useful for jumping to the location corresponding to point in the viewer when using @code{TeX-source-correlate-mode}. @end deffn @AUCTeX{} will try to guess which type of viewer (@acronym{DVI}, PostScript or @acronym{PDF}) has to be used and what options are to be passed over to it. This decision is based on the output files present in the working directory as well as the class and style options used in the document. For example, if there is a @acronym{DVI} file in your working directory, a @acronym{DVI} viewer will be invoked. In case of a @acronym{PDF} file it will be a @acronym{PDF} viewer. If you specified a special paper format like @samp{a5paper} or use the @samp{landscape} option, this will be passed to the viewer by the appropriate options. Especially some @acronym{DVI} viewers depend on this kind of information in order to display your document correctly. In case you are using @samp{pstricks} or @samp{psfrag} in your document, a @acronym{DVI} viewer cannot display the contents correctly and a PostScript viewer will be invoked instead. The association between the tests for the conditions mentioned above and the viewers is made in the variable @code{TeX-view-program-selection}. Therefore this variable is the starting point for customization if you want to use other viewers than the ones suggested by default. @defopt TeX-view-program-selection This is a list of predicates and viewers which is evaluated from front to back in order to find out which viewer to call under the given conditions. In the first element of each list item you can reference one or more predicates defined in @code{TeX-view-predicate-list} or @code{TeX-view-predicate-list-builtin}. In the second element you can reference a viewer defined in @code{TeX-view-program-list} or @code{TeX-view-program-list-builtin}. The viewer of the first item with a positively evaluated predicate is selected. @end defopt So @code{TeX-view-program-selection} only contains references to the actual implementations of predicates and viewer commands respectively which can be found elsewhere. @AUCTeX{} comes with a set of preconfigured predicates and viewer commands which are stored in the variables @code{TeX-view-predicate-list-builtin} and @code{TeX-view-program-list-builtin} respectively. If you are not satisfied with those and want to overwrite one of them or add your own definitions, you can do so via the variables @code{TeX-view-predicate-list} and @code{TeX-view-program-list}. @defopt TeX-view-predicate-list This is a list of predicates for viewer selection and invocation. The first element of each list item is a symbol and the second element a Lisp form to be evaluated. The form should return nil if the predicate is not fulfilled. A built-in predicate from @code{TeX-view-predicate-list-builtin} can be overwritten by defining a new predicate with the same symbol. @end defopt @defopt TeX-view-program-list This is a list of viewer specifications each consisting of a symbolic name and either a command line or a function to be invoked when the viewer is called. If a command line is used, parts of it can be conditionalized by prefixing them with predicates from @code{TeX-view-predicate-list} or @code{TeX-view-predicate-list-builtin}. (See the doc string for the exact format to use.) The command line can also contain placeholders as defined in @code{TeX-expand-list} and @code{TeX-expand-list-builtin} which are expanded before the viewer is called. The third element of each item is a string, or a list of strings, with the name of the executable, or executables, needed to open the output file in the viewer. Placeholders defined in @code{TeX-expand-list} and @code{TeX-expand-list-builtin} can be used here. This element is optional and is used to check whether the viewer is actually available on the system. A built-in viewer spec from @code{TeX-view-program-list-builtin} can be overwritten by defining a new viewer spec with the same name. @end defopt After the viewer is called via either the @samp{View} command or the key stroke @kbd{C-c C-v}, the window system focus goes and stays on the viewer. If you prefer that the focus is pulled back to Emacs immediately after that and you are using evince-compatible viewer, customize the option @code{TeX-view-enince-keep-focus}. @defopt TeX-view-evince-keep-focus When this option is non-nil and the viewer is compatible with evince, the focus is pulled back to Emacs immediately after the viewer is invoked or refreshed from within @AUCTeX{}. @end defopt Note that the viewer selection and invocation as described above will only work if certain default settings in @AUCTeX{} are intact. For one, the whole viewer selection machinery will only be triggered if there is no @samp{%V} expander in @code{TeX-expand-list}. So if you have trouble with the viewer invocation you might check if there is an older customization of the variable in place. In addition, the use of a function in @code{TeX-view-program-list} only works if the @samp{View} command in @code{TeX-command-list} makes use of the hook @code{TeX-run-discard-or-function}. @node I/O Correlation @subsection Forward and Inverse Search @cindex Inverse search @cindex Forward search @cindex I/O correlation @cindex Source specials @cindex Sync@TeX{} @cindex PDFSync Forward and inverse search refer to the correlation between the document source in the editor and the typeset document in the viewer. Forward search allows you to jump to the place in the previewed document corresponding to a certain line in the document source and inverse search vice versa. @findex TeX-source-correlate-mode @AUCTeX{} supports three methods for forward and inverse search: source specials (only @acronym{DVI} output), the pdfsync @LaTeX{} package (only @acronym{PDF} output) and Sync@TeX{} (any type of output). If you want to make use of forward and inverse searching with source specials or Sync@TeX{}, switch on @code{TeX-source-correlate-mode}. @xref{Processor Options}, on how to do that. The use of the pdfsync package is detected automatically if document parsing is enabled. Customize the variable @code{TeX-source-correlate-method} to select the method to use. @defopt TeX-source-correlate-method Method to use for enabling forward and inverse search. This can be @samp{source-specials} if source specials should be used, @samp{synctex} if Sync@TeX{} should be used, or @samp{auto} if @AUCTeX{} should decide. When the variable is set to @samp{auto}, @AUCTeX{} will always use Sync@TeX{} if your @command{latex} processor supports it, source specials otherwise. You must make sure your viewer supports the same method. It is also possible to specify a different method depending on the output, either @acronym{DVI} or @acronym{PDF}, by setting the variable to an alist of the kind @lisp ((dvi . @samp{}) (pdf . @samp{})) @end lisp in which the CDR of each entry is a symbol specifying the method to be used in the corresponding mode. The default value of the variable is @lisp ((dvi . source-specials) (pdf . synctex)) @end lisp which is compatible with the majority of viewers. @end defopt @findex TeX-view Forward search happens automatically upon calling the viewer, e.g.@: by typing @kbd{C-c C-v} (@code{TeX-view}). This will open the viewer or bring it to front and display the output page corresponding to the position of point in the source file. @AUCTeX{} will automatically pass the necessary command line options to the viewer for this to happen. @vindex TeX-source-correlate-start-server Upon opening the viewer you will be asked if you want to start a server process (Gnuserv or Emacs server) which is necessary for inverse search. This happens only if there is no server running already. You can customize the variable @code{TeX-source-correlate-start-server} to inhibit the question and always or never start the server respectively. @defopt TeX-source-correlate-start-server If @code{TeX-source-correlate-mode} is active and a viewer is invoked, the default behavior is to ask if a server process should be started. Set this variable to @code{t} if the question should be inhibited and the server should always be started. Set it to @code{nil} if the server should never be started. Inverse search will not be available in the latter case. @end defopt Inverse search, i.e.@: jumping to the part of your document source in Emacs corresponding to a certain position in the viewer, is triggered from the viewer, typically by a mouse click. Refer to the documentation of your viewer to find out how it has to be configured and what you have to do exactly. In xdvi you normally have to use @kbd{C-down-mouse-1}. @vindex TeX-source-correlate-start-server Note that inverse search with the Evince @acronym{PDF} viewer or its MATE fork Atril might fail in raising the Emacs frame after updating point in your document's buffer. There is simply no way to raise the Emacs frame reliably accross different operating systems and different window managers with their different focus stealing policies. If the Emacs frame is not raised after performing an inverse search from Evince or Atril, you can customize the following option. @defopt TeX-raise-frame-function A function that will be called after performing an inverse search from Evince or Atril in order to raise the current Emacs frame. If your Emacs frame is already raised in that situation, just leave this variable set to its default value @code{raise-frame}. Otherwise, here are some alternative settings that work for some users. @lisp ;; @r{Alternative 1: For some users, @t{`x-focus-frame'} works.} (setq TeX-raise-frame-function #'x-focus-frame) ;; @r{Alternative 2: Under GNOME 3.20 (and probably others), it} ;; @r{seems some focus stealing prevention policy prohibits that} ;; @r{some window gets the focus immediately after the user has} ;; @r{clicked in some other window. Here waiting a bit before} ;; @r{issuing the request seems to work.} (setq TeX-raise-frame-function (lambda () (run-at-time 0.5 nil #'x-focus-frame))) ;; @r{Alternative 3: Use the external @t{wmctrl} tool in order to} ;; @r{force Emacs into the focus.} (setq TeX-raise-frame-function (lambda () (call-process "wmctrl" nil nil nil "-i" "-R" (frame-parameter (selected-frame) 'outer-window-id)))) @end lisp @end defopt @node Debugging @section Catching the errors @cindex Debugging @cindex Errors @cindex Parsing errors @cindex Parsing @TeX{} output @cindex Next error @cindex Parsing @LaTeX{} errors @cindex Overfull boxes @cindex Bad boxes @cindex Underfull boxes Once you've formatted your document you may `debug' it, i.e.@: browse through the errors (La)@TeX{} reported. You may also have a look at a nicely formatted list of all errors and warnings reported by the compiler. @deffn Command TeX-next-error @var{arg} @var{reparse} @kindex C-c ` (@kbd{C-c `}) Go to the next error reported by @TeX{}. The view will be split in two, with the cursor placed as close as possible to the error in the top view. In the bottom view, the error message will be displayed along with some explanatory text. An optional numeric @var{arg}, positive or negative, specifies how many error messages to move. A negative @var{arg} means to move back to previous error messages, see also @code{TeX-previous-error}. The optional @var{reparse} argument makes @AUCTeX{} reparse the error message buffer and start the debugging from the first error. This can also be achieved by calling the function with a prefix argument (@kbd{C-u}). @end deffn @deffn Command TeX-previous-error @var{arg} @kindex M-g p (@kbd{M-g p}) Go to the previous error reported by @TeX{}. An optional numeric @var{arg} specifies how many error messages to move backward. This is like calling @code{TeX-next-error} with a negative argument. @end deffn The command @code{TeX-previous-error} works only if @AUCTeX{} can parse the whole @TeX{} log buffer. This is controlled by the @code{TeX-parse-all-errors} variable. @defopt TeX-parse-all-errors If t, @AUCTeX{} automatically parses the whole output log buffer right after running a @TeX{} command, in order to collect all warnings and errors. This makes it possible to navigate back and forth between the error messages using @code{TeX-next-error} and @code{TeX-previous-error}. This is the default. If nil, @AUCTeX{} does not parse the whole output log buffer and @code{TeX-previous-error} cannot be used. @end defopt As default, @AUCTeX{} will display a special help buffer containing the error reported by @TeX{} along with the documentation. There is however an `expert' option, which allows you to display the real @TeX{} output. @defopt TeX-display-help If t @AUCTeX{} will automatically display a help text whenever an error is encountered using @code{TeX-next-error} (@kbd{C-c `}). If nil a terse information about the error is displayed in the echo area. If @code{expert} @AUCTeX{} will display the output buffer with the raw @TeX{} output. @end defopt @menu * Ignoring warnings:: Controlling warnings to be reported * Error overview:: List of all errors and warnings @end menu @node Ignoring warnings @subsection Controlling warnings to be reported Normally @AUCTeX{} will only report real errors, but you may as well ask it to report `bad boxes' and warnings as well. @deffn Command TeX-toggle-debug-bad-boxes @kindex C-c C-t C-b @vindex TeX-debug-bad-boxes (@kbd{C-c C-t C-b}) Toggle whether @AUCTeX{} should stop at bad boxes (i.e.@: overfull and underfull boxes) as well as normal errors. The boolean option @code{TeX-debug-bad-boxes} is set accordingly. @end deffn @deffn Command TeX-toggle-debug-warnings @kindex C-c C-t C-w @vindex TeX-debug-warnings (@kbd{C-c C-t C-w}) Toggle whether @AUCTeX{} should stop at warnings as well as normal errors. The boolean option @code{TeX-debug-warnings} is set accordingly. @end deffn While many users desire to have warnings reported after compilation, there are certain warnings that are considered unimportant and users want to ignore them. For a more fine-grained control of what kinds of warnings should be shown after compilation, @AUCTeX{} provides other options. @defopt TeX-ignore-warnings Controls which warnings are to be ignored. It can be a regexp matching the message of the warnings to be ignored. More advanced users can set also this option to a symbol with the name of a custom function taking as arguments all the information of the warning listed in @code{TeX-error-list} variable, except the last one about whether to ignore the warning. See the code of @code{TeX-warning} function and the documentation of @code{TeX-error-list} for more details. @end defopt @deffn Command TeX-toggle-suppress-ignored-warnings @kindex C-c C-t C-x @vindex TeX-suppress-ignored-warnings (@kbd{C-c C-t C-x}) Toggle whether @AUCTeX{} should actually hide the ignored warnings specified with @code{TeX-ignore-warnings}. The boolean option @code{TeX-suppress-ignored-warnings} is set accordingly. If this is nil, all warnings are shown, even those matched by @code{TeX-ignore-warnings}, otherwise these are hidden. Note that @code{TeX-debug-warnings} takes the precedence: if it is nil, all warnings are hidden in any case. @end deffn @node Error overview @subsection List of all errors and warnings When the option @code{TeX-parse-all-errors} is non-nil, you will be also able to open an overview of all errors and warnings reported by the @TeX{} compiler. @deffn Command TeX-error-overview Show an overview of the errors and warnings occurred in the last @TeX{} run. In this window you can visit the error on which point is by pressing @key{RET}, and visit the next or previous issue by pressing @key{n} or @key{p} respectively. A prefix argument to these keys specifies how many errors to move forward or backward. You can visit an error also by clicking on its message. Jump to error point in the source code with @key{j}, and use @key{l} see the error in the log buffer. In addition, you can toggle visibility of bad boxes, generic warnings, and ignored warnings with @key{b}, @key{w}, and @key{x}, respectively (see @ref{Ignoring warnings} for details). Press @key{q} to quit the overview. @end deffn @defopt TeX-error-overview-open-after-TeX-run When this boolean variable is non-nil, the error overview will be automatically opened after running @TeX{} if there are errors or warnings to show. @end defopt The error overview is opened in a new window of the current frame by default, but you can change this behavior by customizing the option @code{TeX-error-overview-setup}. @defopt TeX-error-overview-setup Controls the frame setup of the error overview. The possible value is: @code{separate-frame}; with a nil value the current frame is used instead. The parameters of the separate frame can be set with the @code{TeX-error-overview-frame-parameters} option. If the display does not support multi frame, the current frame will be used regardless of the value of this variable. @vindex TeX-error-overview-frame-parameters @end defopt @node Checking @section Checking for problems @cindex Checking @cindex @code{lacheck} @cindex @code{chktex} @cindex Finding errors @cindex Running @code{lacheck} @cindex Running @code{chktex} @cindex Style @cindex Problems @cindex Flymake @cindex Running Flymake Running @TeX{} or @LaTeX{} will only find regular errors in the document, not examples of bad style. Furthermore, description of the errors may often be confusing. The utilities @code{lacheck} and @code{chktex} can be used to find style errors, such as forgetting to escape the space after an abbreviation or using @samp{...} instead of @samp{\ldots} and other similar problems. You start @code{lacheck} with @kbd{C-c C-c Check @key{RET}} and @code{chktex} with @kbd{C-c C-c ChkTeX @key{RET}}. The result will be a list of errors in the @samp{*compilation*} buffer. You can go through the errors with @kbd{C-x `} (@code{next-error}, @pxref{Compilation,,,emacs,The Emacs Editor}), which will move point to the location of the next error. Alternatively, you may want in-buffer notation. @AUCTeX{} provides support for this using the Flymake package in Emacs 26 or newer (@pxref{Using Flymake,,,Flymake,GNU Flymake} for details). To enable, call @kbd{M-x flymake-mode @key{RET}} in the buffer or enable it in all buffers by adding this to your init file: @lisp (add-hook 'LaTeX-mode-hook #'flymake-mode) @end lisp Note that @AUCTeX{} currently only provides support for using @code{chktex} as the flymake backend. Each of the two utilities @code{lacheck} and @code{chktex} will find some errors the other doesn't, but @code{chktex} is more configurable, allowing you to create your own errors. You may need to install the programs before using them. You can get @code{lacheck} from URL:@url{https://www.ctan.org/pkg/lacheck} and @code{chktex} from URL:@url{https://www.ctan.org/pkg/chktex}. @w{@TeX{} Live} contains both. @node Control @section Controlling the output @cindex Controlling the output @cindex Output @cindex Redisplay output @cindex Processes @cindex Killing a process @cindex Finding the master file @cindex Master file @cindex Stopping a process @cindex Current file @cindex Finding the current file A number of commands are available for controlling the output of an application running under @AUCTeX{} @deffn Command TeX-kill-job @kindex C-c C-k (@kbd{C-c C-k}) Kill currently running external application. This may be either of @TeX{}, @LaTeX{}, previewer, Bib@TeX{}, etc. @end deffn @deffn Command TeX-recenter-output-buffer @kindex C-c C-l (@kbd{C-c C-l}) Recenter the output buffer so that the bottom line is visible. @end deffn @deffn Command TeX-home-buffer @kindex C-c ^ (@kbd{C-c ^}) Go to the `master' file in the document associated with the current buffer, or if already there, to the file where the current process was started. @end deffn Additionally, output files produced by @AUCTeX{} can be placed in a separate directory. @defopt TeX-output-dir Set this option to the path of a directory where output files will be placed. The output files include those that are produced by applications running under @AUCTeX{}, temporary files related to region processing and the @previewlatex{} files. If a relative path is specified, it is interpreted as being relative to the master file in a mutlifile document. This is a buffer local variable and must be set separately for all documents and all files in a multifile document. For example, @example %%% Local Variables: %%% mode: latex %%% TeX-output-dir: "build" %%% End: @end example Alternatively, you may use @code{setq-default} to set the default value of this option or set it as a directory local variable (@pxref{Directory Variables,,, emacs, The Emacs Editor}). Note that a non-nil value of @code{TeX-output-dir} might be incompatible with some @TeX{} commands and macros. In particular, the @LaTeX{} macro @samp{\include} is known to not work with this option. Some @TeX{} packages which produce intermediary files might also be incompatible. A possible workaround for those packages is to append the value of @code{TeX-output-dir} to the environment variables @env{TEXINPUTS} and @env{BIBINPUTS}. @end defopt @node Cleaning @section Cleaning intermediate and output files @cindex Cleaning @deffn Command TeX-clean @vindex plain-TeX-clean-intermediate-suffixes @vindex plain-TeX-clean-output-suffixes @vindex LaTeX-clean-intermediate-suffixes @vindex LaTeX-clean-output-suffixes @vindex docTeX-clean-intermediate-suffixes @vindex docTeX-clean-output-suffixes @vindex Texinfo-clean-intermediate-suffixes @vindex Texinfo-clean-output-suffixes @vindex ConTeXt-clean-intermediate-suffixes @vindex ConTeXt-clean-output-suffixes @vindex AmSTeX-clean-intermediate-suffixes @vindex AmSTeX-clean-output-suffixes Remove generated intermediate files. In case a prefix argument is given, remove output files as well. Canonical access to the function is provided by the @samp{Clean} and @samp{Clean All} entries in @code{TeX-command-list}, invokable with @kbd{C-c C-c} or the Command menu. The patterns governing which files to remove can be adapted separately for each @AUCTeX{} mode by means of the following variables: @itemize @item @code{plain-TeX-clean-intermediate-suffixes} @item @code{plain-TeX-clean-output-suffixes} @item @code{LaTeX-clean-intermediate-suffixes} @item @code{LaTeX-clean-output-suffixes} @item @code{docTeX-clean-intermediate-suffixes} @item @code{docTeX-clean-output-suffixes} @item @code{Texinfo-clean-intermediate-suffixes} @item @code{Texinfo-clean-output-suffixes} @item @code{ConTeXt-clean-intermediate-suffixes} @item @code{ConTeXt-clean-output-suffixes} @item @code{AmSTeX-clean-intermediate-suffixes} @item @code{AmSTeX-clean-output-suffixes} @end itemize @end deffn @defopt TeX-clean-confirm Control if deletion of intermediate and output files has to be confirmed before it is actually done. If non-nil, ask before deleting files. @end defopt @node Documentation @section Documentation about macros and packages @cindex Documentation @deffn Command TeX-documentation-texdoc @kindex C-c ? (@kbd{C-c ?}) Get documentation about the packages installed on your system, using @command{texdoc} to find the manuals. The function will prompt for the name of packages. If point is on a word, this will be suggested as default. If the command is called with a prefix argument, you will be shown a list of manuals of the given package among to choose. The command can be invoked by the key binding mentioned above as well as the @samp{Find Documentation...} entry in the mode menu. @end deffn @node Customization @chapter Customization and Extension @menu * Modes and Hooks:: Modes and Hooks * Multifile:: Multifile Documents * Parsing Files:: Automatic Parsing of @TeX{} Files * Internationalization:: Language Support * Automatic:: Automatic Customization * Style Files:: Writing Your Own Style Support @end menu @node Modes and Hooks @section Modes and Hooks @AUCTeX{} supports a wide variety of derivatives and extensions of @TeX{}. Besides plain @TeX{} those are @LaTeX{}, AMS-@TeX{}, @ConTeXt{}, Texinfo and doc@TeX{}. For each of them there is a separate major mode in @AUCTeX{} and each major mode runs @code{text-mode-hook}, @code{TeX-mode-hook} as well as a hook special to the mode in this order. (As an exception, Texinfo mode does not run @code{TeX-mode-hook}.) The following table provides an overview of the respective mode functions and hooks. @multitable {Plain @TeX{}} {@code{plain-tex-mode}} {@code{plain-TeX-mode-hook}} @headitem Type @tab Mode function @tab Hook @item Plain @TeX{} @tab @code{plain-tex-mode} @tab @code{plain-TeX-mode-hook} @item @LaTeX{} @tab @code{latex-mode} @tab @code{LaTeX-mode-hook} @item AMS-@TeX{} @tab @code{ams-tex-mode} @tab @code{AmS-TeX-mode-hook} @item @ConTeXt{} @tab @code{context-mode} @tab @code{ConTeXt-mode-hook} @item Texinfo @tab @code{texinfo-mode} @tab @code{Texinfo-mode-hook} @item Doc@TeX{} @tab @code{doctex-mode} @tab @code{docTeX-mode-hook} @end multitable @findex plain-tex-mode @vindex plain-TeX-mode-hook @findex latex-mode @vindex LaTeX-mode-hook @findex ams-tex-mode @vindex AmS-TeX-mode-hook @findex ConTeXt-mode @vindex ConTeXt-mode-hook @findex texinfo-mode @vindex Texinfo-mode-hook @findex doctex-mode @vindex docTeX-mode-hook If you need to make a customization via a hook which is only relevant for one of the modes listed above, put it into the respective mode hook, if it is relevant for any @AUCTeX{} mode, add it to @code{TeX-mode-hook} and if it is relevant for all text modes, append it to @code{text-mode-hook}. Other useful hooks are listed below. @defvr Variable TeX-after-compilation-finished-hook Hook which is run after the @TeX{}/@LaTeX{} processor has successfully finished compiling your document. (@xref{Processing}, for finding out how to compile your document.) Each function in the hook is run with the compiled output document as its argument. This is useful for automatically refreshing the viewer after re-compilation especially when using Emacs viewers such as DocView or PDF Tools. The function @code{TeX-revert-document-buffer} can be added to the hook for this purpose. @end defvr @vindex TeX-after-compilation-finished-hook @findex TeX-revert-document-buffer @node Multifile @section Multifile Documents @cindex Multifile Documents @cindex Documents @cindex Documents with multiple files @cindex Multiple Files @cindex Many Files @cindex Including @cindex \include @cindex Inputing @cindex \input @cindex Master file You may wish to spread a document over many files (as you are likely to do if there are multiple authors, or if you have not yet discovered the power of the outline commands (@pxref{Outline})). This can be done by having a ``master'' file in which you include the various files with the @TeX{} macro @samp{\input} or the @LaTeX{} macro @samp{\include}. These files may also include other files themselves. However, to format the document you must run the commands on the top level master file. When you, for example, ask @AUCTeX{} to run a command on the master file, it has no way of knowing the name of the master file. By default, it will assume that the current file is the master file. If you insert the following in your init file (@file{init.el} or @file{.emacs}), @AUCTeX{} will use a more advanced algorithm. @lisp (setq-default TeX-master nil) ; @r{Query for master file.} @end lisp @c FIXME: It doesn't seem that current implementation has this @c TeX-header-end aware feature. If @AUCTeX{} finds the line indicating the end of the header in a master file (@code{TeX-header-end}), it can figure out for itself that this is a master file. Otherwise, it will ask for the name of the master file associated with the buffer. To avoid asking you again, @AUCTeX{} will automatically insert the name of the master file as a file variable (@pxref{File Variables,,,emacs,The Emacs Editor}). You can also insert the file variable yourself, by putting the following text at the end of your files. @vindex TeX-header-end @example %%% Local Variables: %%% TeX-master: "master" %%% End: @end example You should always set this variable to the name of the top level document. If you always use the same name for your top level documents, you can set @code{TeX-master} in your init file such as @file{init.el} or @file{.emacs}. @lisp (setq-default TeX-master "master") ; @r{All master files called @t{"master"}.} @end lisp @defopt TeX-master The master file associated with the current buffer. If the file being edited is actually included from another file, then you can tell @AUCTeX{} the name of the master file by setting this variable. If there are multiple levels of nesting, specify the top level file. If this variable is @code{nil}, @AUCTeX{} will query you for the name. If the variable is @code{t}, then @AUCTeX{} will assume the file is a master file itself. If the variable is @code{shared}, then @AUCTeX{} will query for the name, but will not change the file. If the variable is @code{dwim}, @AUCTeX{} will try to avoid querying by attempting to ``do what I mean''; and then change the file. @end defopt @defopt TeX-one-master Regular expression matching ordinary @TeX{} files. You should set this variable to match the name of all files, for which it is a good idea to append a @code{TeX-master} file variable entry automatically. When @AUCTeX{} adds the name of the master file as a file variable, it does not need to ask next time you edit the file. If you dislike @AUCTeX{} automatically modifying your files, you can set this variable to @samp{""}. By default, @AUCTeX{} will modify any file with an extension of @samp{.tex}, @samp{.texi} or @samp{.dtx}. @end defopt @deffn Command TeX-master-file-ask @kindex C-c _ (@kbd{C-c _}) Query for the name of a master file and add the respective File Variables (@pxref{File Variables,,,emacs,The Emacs Editor}) to the file for setting this variable permanently. @AUCTeX{} will not ask for a master file when it encounters existing files. This function shall give you the possibility to insert the variable manually. @end deffn @AUCTeX{} keeps track of macros, environments, labels, and style files that are used in a given document. For this to work with multifile documents, @AUCTeX{} has to have a place to put the information about the files in the document. This is done by having an @file{auto} subdirectory placed in the directory where your document is located. Each time you save a file, @AUCTeX{} will write information about the file into the @file{auto} directory. When you load a file, @AUCTeX{} will read the information in the @file{auto} directory about the file you loaded @emph{and the master file specified by @code{TeX-master}}. Since the master file (perhaps indirectly) includes all other files in the document, @AUCTeX{} will get information from all files in the document. This means that you will get from each file, for example, completion for all labels defined anywhere in the document. @AUCTeX{} will create the @file{auto} directory automatically if @code{TeX-auto-save} is non-nil. Without it, the files in the document will not know anything about each other, except for the name of the master file. @xref{Automatic Local}. @deffn Command TeX-save-document @kindex C-c C-d (@kbd{C-c C-d}) Save all buffers known to belong to the current document. @end deffn @defopt TeX-save-query If non-nil, then query the user before saving each file with @code{TeX-save-document}. @end defopt @node Parsing Files @section Automatic Parsing of @TeX{} Files @cindex Parsing @TeX{} @cindex Automatic Parsing @cindex Tabs @cindex Tabify @cindex Untabify @AUCTeX{} depends heavily on being able to extract information from the buffers by parsing them. Since parsing the buffer can be somewhat slow, the parsing is initially disabled. You are encouraged to enable them by adding the following lines to your init file such as @file{init.el} or @file{.emacs}. @lisp (setq TeX-parse-self t) ; @r{Enable parse on load.} (setq TeX-auto-save t) ; @r{Enable parse on save.} @end lisp The latter command will make @AUCTeX{} store the parsed information in an @file{auto} subdirectory in the directory each time the @TeX{} files are stored, @pxref{Automatic Local}. If @AUCTeX{} finds the pre-parsed information when loading a file, it will not need to reparse the buffer. The information in the @file{auto} directory is also useful for multifile documents, @pxref{Multifile}, since it allows each file to access the parsed information from all the other files in the document. This is done by first reading the information from the master file, and then recursively the information from each file stored in the master file. The variables can also be set on a per file basis, by changing the file local variables. @example %%% Local Variables: %%% TeX-parse-self: t %%% TeX-auto-save: t %%% End: @end example Even when you have disabled the automatic parsing, you can force the generation of style information by pressing @kbd{C-c C-n}. This is often the best choice, as you will be able to decide when it is necessary to reparse the file. @defopt TeX-parse-self Parse file after loading it if no style hook is found for it. @end defopt @defopt TeX-auto-save Automatically save style information when saving the buffer. @end defopt @deffn Command TeX-normal-mode @var{arg} @kindex C-c C-n (@kbd{C-c C-n}) Remove all information about this buffer, and apply the style hooks again. Save buffer first including style information. With optional argument, also reload the style hooks. @end deffn When @AUCTeX{} saves your buffer, it can optionally convert all tabs in your buffer into spaces. Tabs confuse @AUCTeX{}'s error message parsing and so should generally be avoided. However, tabs are significant in some environments, and so by default @AUCTeX{} does not remove them. To convert tabs to spaces when saving a buffer, insert the following in your init file such as @file{init.el} or @file{.emacs}: @lisp (setq TeX-auto-untabify t) @end lisp @defopt TeX-auto-untabify Automatically remove all tabs from a file before saving it. @end defopt Instead of disabling the parsing entirely, you can also speed it significantly up by limiting the information it will search for (and store) when parsing the buffer. You can do this by setting the default values for the buffer local variables @code{TeX-auto-regexp-list} and @code{TeX-auto-parse-length} in your init file such as @file{init.el} or @file{.emacs}. @lisp ;; @r{Only parse LaTeX class and package information.} (setq-default TeX-auto-regexp-list 'LaTeX-auto-minimal-regexp-list) ;; @r{The class and package information is usually near the beginning.} (setq-default TeX-auto-parse-length 2000) @end lisp This example will speed the parsing up significantly, but @AUCTeX{} will no longer be able to provide completion for labels, macros, environments, or bibitems specified in the document, nor will it know what files belong to the document. These variables can also be specified on a per file basis, by changing the file local variables. @example %%% Local Variables: %%% TeX-auto-regexp-list: TeX-auto-full-regexp-list %%% TeX-auto-parse-length: 999999 %%% End: @end example @defopt TeX-auto-regexp-list List of regular expressions used for parsing the current file. @end defopt @defopt TeX-auto-parse-length Maximal length of @TeX{} file that will be parsed. @end defopt The pre-specified lists of regexps are defined below. You can use these before loading @AUCTeX{} by quoting them, as in the example above. @defvr Constant TeX-auto-empty-regexp-list Parse nothing @end defvr @defvr Constant LaTeX-auto-minimal-regexp-list Only parse @LaTeX{} class and packages. @end defvr @defvr Constant LaTeX-auto-label-regexp-list Only parse @LaTeX{} labels. @end defvr @defvr Constant LaTeX-auto-index-regexp-list Only parse @LaTeX{} index and glossary entries. @end defvr @defvr Constant LaTeX-auto-class-regexp-list Only parse macros in @LaTeX{} classes and packages. @end defvr @defvr Constant LaTeX-auto-pagestyle-regexp-list Only parse @LaTeX{} pagestyles. @end defvr @defvr Constant LaTeX-auto-counter-regexp-list Only parse @LaTeX{} counters. @end defvr @defvr Constant LaTeX-auto-length-regexp-list Only parse @LaTeX{} lengths. @end defvr @defvr Constant LaTeX-auto-savebox-regexp-list Only parse @LaTeX{} saveboxes. @end defvr @defvr Constant LaTeX-auto-regexp-list Parse common @LaTeX{} commands. @end defvr @defvr Constant plain-TeX-auto-regexp-list Parse common plain @TeX{} commands. @end defvr @defvr Constant TeX-auto-full-regexp-list Parse all @TeX{} and @LaTeX{} commands that @AUCTeX{} can use. @end defvr @node Internationalization @section Language Support @cindex Internationalization @cindex Language Support @cindex CJK language @cindex C@TeX{} @cindex China@TeX{} @cindex p@TeX{} @cindex up@TeX{} @cindex ASCII p@TeX{} @cindex j@TeX{} @cindex NTT j@TeX{} @cindex k@TeX{} @cindex H@LaTeX{} @cindex @acronym{CJK}-@LaTeX{} @TeX{} and Emacs are usable for European (Latin, Cyrillic, Greek) based languages. Some @LaTeX{} and EmacsLisp packages are available for easy typesetting and editing documents in European languages. @c Some Texinfo macros are not used because they require quite recent @c texinfo versions (2005-03-05): @c Second arg of @acronym is available with 4.7, @comma is available in @c 4.7, @abbr is available in 4.8. @c -> @abbr{MULE, MULtilingual Enhancement to GNU Emacs} @c -> @acronym{CJK, Chinese@comma{} Japanese@comma{} and Korean} All Emacs versions supported by current @AUCTeX{} can handle @acronym{CJK} (Chinese, Japanese, and Korean) languages by default. In most cases, special versions of @TeX{} engines are needed for high-quality typesetting of @acronym{CJK} languages: C@TeX{} and China@TeX{} for Chinese, ASCII p@TeX{}, up@TeX{} and NTT j@TeX{} for Japanese, H@LaTeX{} and k@TeX{} for Korean. They are necessary as well when you want to typeset documents saved in their domestic encodings such as @samp{Shift-JIS}. Currently, @AUCTeX{} offers native support for p@TeX{}, up@TeX{} and j@TeX{} only. @c FIXME: We need more information for CTeX, ChinaTeX, KTeX, and HLaTeX. If you don't need fine tuning in the result with respect to the typesetting rules of their respective national standards, most unicode based @TeX{} engines, e.g.@: Lua@TeX{} and Xe@TeX{}, can handle @acronym{CJK} languages by default if they are encoded in @acronym{UTF}-8. The @acronym{CJK}-@LaTeX{} package is provided for supporting @acronym{CJK} scripts in a standard @LaTeX{} document. @menu * European:: Using @AUCTeX{} with European Languages * Japanese:: Using @AUCTeX{} with Japanese @end menu @node European @subsection Using @AUCTeX{} with European Languages @cindex Europe @cindex European Characters @cindex @acronym{ISO} Character set @cindex @acronym{ISO} 8859 Latin 1 @cindex Latin 1 @subsubsection Typing and Displaying Non-ASCII Characters First you will need a way to write non-ASCII characters. You can either use macros, or teach @TeX{} about the @acronym{ISO} character sets. I prefer the latter, it has the advantage that the usual standard emacs word movement and case change commands will work. Recommended encoding for @LaTeX{} document is @acronym{UTF}-8. Recent @LaTeX{}2e has native support for @acronym{UTF}-8. If your @LaTeX{}2e is not recent enough, just add @samp{\usepackage[utf8]@{inputenc@}}. You can still use @acronym{ISO} 8859 Latin 1 encoding with @samp{\usepackage[latin1]@{inputenc@}}. To be able to display non-ASCII characters you will need an appropriate font. All Emacs versions supported by current @AUCTeX{} can display 8-bit characters, provided that suitable fonts are installed. @c FIXME: These are considered as kind of obsolete, aren't they? A compromise is to use an European character set when editing the file, and convert to @TeX{} macros when reading and writing the files. @table @file @item iso-cvt.el @cindex @file{iso-cvt.el} Much like @file{iso-tex.el} but is bundled with Emacs 19.23 and later. @item X-Symbol @cindex X-Symbol a much more complete package for Emacs that can also handle a lot of mathematical characters and input methods. @end table @subsubsection Style Files for Different Languages @cindex ispell @AUCTeX{} supports style files for several languages. Each style file may modify @AUCTeX{} to better support the language, and will run a language specific hook that will allow you to for example change ispell dictionary, or run code to change the keyboard remapping. The following will for example choose a Danish dictionary for documents including @samp{\usepackage[danish]@{babel@}}. This requires parsing to be enabled, @pxref{Parsing Files}. @lisp (add-hook 'TeX-language-dk-hook (lambda () (ispell-change-dictionary "danish"))) @end lisp The following style files are recognized: @c In alphabetic order of the hooks: @vindex TeX-language-bg-hook @vindex TeX-language-cz-hook @vindex TeX-language-dk-hook @vindex TeX-language-en-hook @vindex TeX-language-nl-hook @vindex TeX-language-de-hook @vindex TeX-language-it-hook @vindex TeX-language-is-hook @vindex TeX-language-pl-hook @vindex TeX-language-pt-br-hook @vindex TeX-language-pt-hook @vindex TeX-language-sk-hook @vindex TeX-language-sv-hook @cindex Brazilian Portuguese @cindex Bulgarian @cindex Czech @cindex Italian @cindex Danish @cindex Dutch @cindex English @cindex German @cindex Polish @cindex Portuguese @cindex Slovak @cindex Swedish @table @file @item brazilian @itemx brazil Runs style hook @code{TeX-language-pt-br-hook}. Gives @samp{"} word syntax, makes the @key{"} key inserts @samp{``} or @samp{''} depending on context. Typing @key{"} twice will insert a literal @samp{"}. Typing @key{-} twice will insert @samp{"=}, three times @samp{--}. @item bulgarian Runs style hook @code{TeX-language-bg-hook}. Gives @samp{"} word syntax, makes the @key{"} key insert a literal @samp{"}. Typing @key{"} twice will insert @samp{"`} or @samp{"'} depending on context. Typing @key{-} twice will insert @samp{"=}, three times @samp{--}. @item czech Runs style hook @code{TeX-language-cz-hook}. Pressing @key{"} will insert @samp{\uv@{} and @samp{@}} depending on context. @c FIXME: Is the difference between dk and danish really intented? @item danish Runs style hook @code{TeX-language-dk-hook}. Pressing @key{"} will insert @samp{"`} and @samp{"'} depending on context. Typing @key{-} twice will insert @samp{"=}, i.e.@: a hyphen string allowing hyphenation in the composing words. @c dk.sty seems to be obsolete, so we don't want to encourage using it. @c @item dk @c Runs style hook @code{TeX-language-dk-hook}. @item dutch Runs style hook @code{TeX-language-nl-hook}. @item english @itemx australian @itemx canadian @itemx newzealand Runs style hook @code{TeX-language-en-hook}. @item frenchb @itemx francais Runs style hook @code{TeX-language-fr-hook}. Pressing @key{"} will insert @samp{\og} and @samp{\fg} depending on context. Note that the language name for customizing @code{TeX-quote-language-alist} is @samp{french}. @item german @itemx ngerman Runs style hook @code{TeX-language-de-hook}. Gives @samp{"} word syntax, makes the @key{"} key insert a literal @samp{"}. Pressing the key twice will give you opening or closing German quotes (@samp{"`} or @samp{"'}). Typing @key{-} twice will insert @samp{"=}, three times @samp{--}. @item icelandic Runs style hook @code{TeX-language-is-hook}. Gives @samp{"} word syntax, makes the @key{"} key insert a literal @samp{"}. Typing @key{"} twice will insert @samp{"`} or @samp{"'} depending on context. Typing @key{-} twice will insert @samp{"=}, three times @samp{--}. @item italian Runs style hook @code{TeX-language-it-hook}. Pressing @key{"} will insert @samp{"<} and @samp{">} depending on context. @item polish Runs style hook @code{TeX-language-pl-hook}. Gives @samp{"} word syntax and makes the @key{"} key insert a literal @samp{"}. Pressing @key{"} twice will insert @samp{"`} or @samp{"'} depending on context. @item polski Runs style hook @code{TeX-language-pl-hook}. Makes the @key{"} key insert a literal @samp{"}. Pressing @key{"} twice will insert @samp{,,} or @samp{''} depending on context. @item portuguese @itemx portuges Runs style hook @code{TeX-language-pt-hook}. Gives @samp{"} word syntax, makes the @key{"} key inserts @samp{"<} or @samp{">} depending on context. Typing @key{"} twice will insert a literal @samp{"}. Typing @key{-} twice will insert @samp{"=}, three times @samp{--}. Note that the language name for customizing @code{TeX-quote-language-alist} is @samp{portuguese}. @item slovak Runs style hook @code{TeX-language-sk-hook}. Pressing @key{"} will insert @samp{\uv@{} and @samp{@}} depending on context. @item swedish Runs style hook @code{TeX-language-sv-hook}. Pressing @key{"} will insert @samp{''}. Typing @key{-} twice will insert @samp{"=}, three times @samp{--}. @end table Replacement of language-specific hyphen strings like @samp{"=} with dashes does not require to type @key{-} three times in a row. You can put point after the hypen string anytime and trigger the replacement by typing @key{-}. In case you are not satisfied with the suggested behavior of quote and hyphen insertion you can change it by customizing the variables @code{TeX-quote-language-alist} and @code{LaTeX-babel-hyphen-language-alist} respectively. @defopt TeX-quote-language-alist Used for overriding the default language-specific quote insertion behavior. This is an alist where each element is a list consisting of four items. The first item is the name of the language in concern as a string. See the list of supported languages above. The second item is the opening quotation mark. The third item is the closing quotation mark. Opening and closing quotation marks can be specified directly as strings or as functions returning a string. The fourth item is a boolean controlling quote insertion. It should be non-nil if if the special quotes should only be used after inserting a literal @samp{"} character first, i.e.@: on second key press. @end defopt @defopt LaTeX-babel-hyphen-language-alist Used for overriding the behavior of hyphen insertion for specific languages. Every element in this alist is a list of three items. The first item should specify the affected language as a string. The second item denotes the hyphen string to be used as a string. The third item, a boolean, controls the behavior of hyphen insertion and should be non-nil if the special hyphen should be inserted after inserting a literal @samp{-} character, i.e.@: on second key press. @end defopt The defaults of hyphen insertion are defined by the variables @code{LaTeX-babel-hyphen} and @code{LaTeX-babel-hyphen-after-hyphen} respectively. @defopt LaTeX-babel-hyphen String to be used when typing @key{-}. This usually is a hyphen alternative or hyphenation aid provided by @samp{babel} and the related language style files, like @samp{"=}, @samp{"~} or @samp{"-}. Set it to an empty string or nil in order to disable language-specific hyphen insertion. @end defopt @defopt LaTeX-babel-hyphen-after-hyphen Control insertion of hyphen strings. If non-nil insert normal hyphen on first key press and swap it with the language-specific hyphen string specified in the variable @code{LaTeX-babel-hyphen} on second key press. If nil do it the other way round. @end defopt @node Japanese @subsection Using @AUCTeX{} with Japanese @TeX{} @cindex Japan @cindex Japanese @cindex Nippon @cindex NTT j@TeX{} @cindex j@TeX{} @cindex j@LaTeX{} @cindex ASCII p@TeX{} @cindex p@TeX{} @cindex p@LaTeX{} @cindex up@TeX{} @cindex up@LaTeX{} @cindex @file{tex-jp.el} @vindex TeX-default-mode @vindex TeX-parse-self @vindex TeX-engine @vindex TeX-engine-alist @vindex japanese-TeX-mode @findex japanese-plain-tex-mode @findex japanese-latex-mode To write Japanese text with @AUCTeX{}, you need the versions of @TeX{} and Emacs that support Japanese. @AUCTeX{} supports three Japanese @TeX{} engines by default: NTT j@TeX{}, ASCII p@TeX{} and up@TeX{}. Activate @code{japanese-plain-tex-mode} or @code{japanese-latex-mode} to use the Japanese @TeX{} engines. If it doesn't work, send mail to Masayuki Ataka @email{masayuki.ataka@@gmail.com} or Ikumi Keita @email{ikumikeita@@jcom.home.ne.jp}, who currently concern with stuff related to Japanese in @AUCTeX{}. None of the primary @AUCTeX{} maintainers understand Japanese, so they cannot help you. It is recommended to enable @code{TeX-parse-self} for typical Japanese @LaTeX{} users. When enabled, @code{japanese-latex-mode} selects the suitable Japanese @TeX{} engine automatically based on the class file name (such as @code{jbook}, @code{jsarticle} and @code{tjreport}) and its option. @xref{Parsing Files}. It is important to select the suitable Japanese @TeX{} engine because the selected engine determines the command name such as @command{platex} and @command{uptex} to typeset the document. If you find that wrong command is used, check the value of @code{TeX-engine} on that buffer. If the value does not suit the current document, change the value by the @samp{TeXing Options} submenu below the @samp{Command} menu. @xref{Processor Options}. To make the selected engine to persist across Emacs sessions, there are two ways from which you can choose one according to your needs: @enumerate @item If you use a specific engine (almost) exclusively, customize the option @code{japanese-TeX-engine-default}. @defopt japanese-TeX-engine-default The default @code{TeX-engine} in Japanese @TeX{} mode. The default value is @samp{ptex}. @end defopt @item If you want to set the engine on a per file basis, use the file local variables to set @code{TeX-engine}. Here is a sample code to set @code{TeX-engine} to @samp{uptex}: @example %%% Local Variables: %%% mode: japanese-latex %%% TeX-engine: uptex %%% End: @end example @end enumerate In the both cases above, the valid value is one of @samp{ptex}, @samp{jtex} and @samp{uptex}. You can override the command names associated with the above three engines or define your own engine by customizing @code{TeX-engine-alist}. @xref{Processor Options}. It is sometimes necessary to use an engine which differs from the one @AUCTeX{} selects automatically. For example, even when you want to use @code{j-article} document class deliberately with ASCII p@LaTeX{}, @AUCTeX{} selects NTT j@LaTeX{} command if @code{TeX-parse-self} is enabled, because @code{j-article} originally belongs to NTT j@LaTeX{}. In such cases, use the file local variable method above to select the engine you intend to use. If you usually use @AUCTeX{} in Japanese, setting the following variables is useful. @defopt TeX-default-mode Mode to enter for a new file when it cannot be determined whether the file is plain @TeX{} or @LaTeX{} or what. If you want to enter Japanese @LaTeX{} mode whenever this may happen, set the variable like this: @lisp (setq TeX-default-mode 'japanese-latex-mode) @end lisp @end defopt @defopt japanese-LaTeX-default-style The default style/class when creating a new Japanese @LaTeX{} document. The default value is @samp{"jarticle"}. @end defopt It is recommended also for Japanese users to customize the option @code{TeX-PDF-from-DVI} to @samp{"Dvipdfmx"}. @xref{Processor Options}. There are three customize options with regard to the encoding of Japanese text. @defopt japanese-TeX-use-kanji-opt-flag If non-nil, @AUCTeX{} adds @option{-kanji} option to the typesetting command when @code{TeX-engine} is @samp{ptex}. @end defopt Usually @AUCTeX{} guesses the right coding systems for input to and output from the Japanese @TeX{} process, but you can override them by the following two customize options. @defopt TeX-japanese-process-input-coding-system If non-nil, used for encoding input to Japanese @TeX{} process. When @code{nil}, @AUCTeX{} tries to choose suitable coding system. @end defopt @defopt TeX-japanese-process-output-coding-system If non-nil, used for decoding output from Japanese @TeX{} process. When @code{nil}, @AUCTeX{} tries to choose suitable coding system. @end defopt The former customize options @code{japanese-TeX-command-default}, @code{japanese-LaTeX-command-default} and @code{japanese-TeX-command-list} are removed from @AUCTeX{}. Use @code{japanese-TeX-engine-default} instead. If you need to customize the executable file name such as @samp{"latex"}, the options for them, or both, customize @code{TeX-engine-alist}. The following two additional font commands are available in @LaTeX{} mode buffer. @table @kbd @item C-c C-f g @kindex C-c C-f g @cindex @code{\textgt} @cindex @code{\mathgt} Insert @b{gothic font} command @samp{\textgt@{@point{}@}} or @samp{\mathgt@{@point{}@}} depending on the context. @item C-c C-f m @kindex C-c C-f m @cindex @code{\textmc} @cindex @code{\mathmc} Insert mincho font command @samp{\textmc@{@point{}@}} or @samp{\mathmc@{@point{}@}} depending on the context. @end table Although they are meaningful only with @samp{ptex} and @samp{uptex} engines, it won't matter in buffers with other engines. See @file{tex-jp.el} for more information. @node Automatic @section Automatic Customization @cindex Automatic Customization @cindex Extracting @TeX{} symbols @cindex Automatic @cindex @file{auto} directories. @cindex Parsing @TeX{} @cindex @TeX{} parsing @cindex Generating symbols Since @AUCTeX{} is so highly customizable, it makes sense that it is able to customize itself. The automatic customization consists of scanning @TeX{} files and extracting symbols, environments, and things like that. The automatic customization is done on three different levels. The global level is the level shared by all users at your site, and consists of scanning the standard @TeX{} style files, and any extra styles added locally for all users on the site. The private level deals with those style files you have written for your own use, and use in different documents. You may have a @file{~/lib/TeX/} directory where you store useful style files for your own use. The local level is for a specific directory, and deals with writing customization for the files for your normal @TeX{} documents. If compared with the environment variable @env{TEXINPUTS}, the global level corresponds to the directories built into @TeX{}. The private level corresponds to the directories you add yourself, except for @file{.}, which is the local level. @menu * Automatic Global:: Automatic Customization for the Site * Automatic Private:: Automatic Customization for a User * Automatic Local:: Automatic Customization for a Directory @end menu By default @AUCTeX{} will search for customization files in all the global, private, and local style directories, but you can also set the path directly. This is useful if you for example want to add another person's style hooks to your path. Please note that all matching files found in @code{TeX-style-path} are loaded, and all hooks defined in the files will be executed. @defopt TeX-style-path List of directories to search for @AUCTeX{} style files. @end defopt By default, when @AUCTeX{} searches a directory for files, it will recursively search through subdirectories. @defopt TeX-file-recurse Whether to search @TeX{} directories recursively: nil means do not recurse, a positive integer means go that far deep in the directory hierarchy, t means recurse indefinitely. @end defopt By default, @AUCTeX{} will ignore files named @file{.}, @file{..}, @file{SCCS}, @file{RCS}, and @file{CVS}. @defopt TeX-ignore-file Regular expression matching file names to ignore. These files or directories will not be considered when searching for @TeX{} files in a directory. @end defopt @node Automatic Global @subsection Automatic Customization for the Site @cindex Global style hook directory @cindex Global macro directory @cindex Site macro directory @cindex Global @TeX{} macro directory @cindex Site @TeX{} macro directory @cindex Global directories @cindex Site information Assuming that the automatic customization at the global level was done when @AUCTeX{} was installed, your choice is now: will you use it? If you use it, you will benefit by having access to all the symbols and environments available for completion purposes. The drawback is slower load time when you edit a new file and perhaps too many confusing symbols when you try to do a completion. You can disable the automatic generated global style hooks by setting the variable @code{TeX-auto-global} to nil. @defopt TeX-macro-global Directories containing the site's @TeX{} style files. @end defopt @defopt TeX-style-global Directory containing hand generated @TeX{} information. These correspond to @TeX{} macros shared by all users of a site. @end defopt @defopt TeX-auto-global Directory containing automatically generated information. For storing automatic extracted information about the @TeX{} macros shared by all users of a site. @end defopt @node Automatic Private @subsection Automatic Customization for a User @cindex Private style hook directory @cindex Private macro directory @cindex Personal macro directory @cindex Private @TeX{} macro directory @cindex Personal @TeX{} macro directory @cindex Private directories @cindex Personal information You should specify where you store your private @TeX{} macros, so @AUCTeX{} can extract their information. The extracted information will go to the directories listed in @code{TeX-auto-private} Use @kbd{M-x TeX-auto-generate @key{RET}} to extract the information. @defopt TeX-macro-private Directories where you store your personal @TeX{} macros. The value defaults to the directories listed in the @env{TEXINPUTS} and @env{BIBINPUTS} environment variables or to the respective directories in @code{$TEXMFHOME} of @command{kpsewhich} setting if no results can be obtained from the environment variables. @end defopt @defopt TeX-auto-private List of directories containing automatically generated @AUCTeX{} style files. These correspond to the personal @TeX{} macros. @end defopt @deffn Command TeX-auto-generate @var{tex} @var{auto} (@kbd{M-x TeX-auto-generate @key{RET}}) Generate style hook for @var{tex} and store it in @var{auto}. If @var{tex} is a directory, generate style hooks for all files in the directory. @end deffn @defopt TeX-style-private List of directories containing hand generated @AUCTeX{} style files. These correspond to the personal @TeX{} macros. @end defopt @node Automatic Local @subsection Automatic Customization for a Directory @cindex Local style hooks @cindex Updating style hooks @cindex Automatic updating style hooks @cindex Local style hooks @cindex Local style directory @AUCTeX{} can update the style information about a file each time you save it, and it will do this if the directory @code{TeX-auto-local} exists. @code{TeX-auto-local} is by default set to @samp{"auto"}, so simply creating an @file{auto} directory will enable automatic saving of style information. The advantage of doing this is that macros, labels, etc.@: defined in any file in a multifile document will be known in all the files in the document. The disadvantage is that saving will be slower. To disable, set @code{TeX-auto-local} to nil. @defopt TeX-style-local Directory containing hand generated @TeX{} information. These correspond to @TeX{} macros found in the current directory. @end defopt @defopt TeX-auto-local Directory containing automatically generated @TeX{} information. These correspond to @TeX{} macros found in the current directory. @end defopt @node Style Files @section Writing Your Own Style Support @cindex Style files @cindex Style hooks @cindex @file{style} @xref{Automatic}, for a discussion about automatically generated global, private, and local style files. The hand generated style files are equivalent, except that they by default are found in @file{style} directories instead of @file{auto} directories. @menu * Simple Style:: A Simple Style File * Adding Macros:: Adding Support for Macros * Adding Environments:: Adding Support for Environments * Adding Other:: Adding or Examining Other Information * Hacking the Parser:: Automatic Extraction of New Things @end menu If you write some useful support for a public @TeX{} style file, please send it to us. @node Simple Style @subsection A Simple Style File @cindex @file{book.el} @cindex Sample style file @cindex Style file @cindex Example of a style file. @cindex Style hook @cindex Adding a style hook Here is a simple example of a style file. @lisp ;;; book.el - Special code for book style. (TeX-add-style-hook "book" (lambda () (LaTeX-largest-level-set "part")) TeX-dialect) @end lisp The example is from the @AUCTeX{} sources and is loaded for any @LaTeX{} document using the book document class (or style before @LaTeX{}2e). (Note that the above code is much simplified for explanatory purpose.) The file specifies that the largest kind of section in such a document is @samp{part}. The interesting thing to notice is that the style file defines an (anonymous) function, and adds it to the list of loaded style hooks by calling @code{TeX-add-style-hook}. The first time the user indirectly tries to access some style-specific information, such as the largest sectioning command available, the style hooks for all files directly or indirectly read by the current document are executed. The actual files will only be evaluated once, but the hooks will be called for each buffer using the style file. Note that the basename of the style file and the name of the style hook should usually be identical. @defun TeX-add-style-hook @var{style} @var{hook} &optional @var{dialect-expr} Add @var{hook} to the list of functions to run when we use the @TeX{} file @var{style} and the current dialect is one in the set derived from @var{dialect-expr}. When @var{dialect-expr} is omitted, then @var{hook} is allowed to be run whatever the current dialect is. @var{dialect-expr} may be one of: @itemize @item A symbol indicating a singleton containing one basic @TeX{} dialect, this symbol shall be selected among: @table @code @item :latex For all files in @LaTeX{} mode, or any mode derived thereof. @item :bibtex For all files in Bib@TeX{} mode, or any mode derived thereof. @item :texinfo For all files in Texinfo mode. @item :plain-tex For all files in plain-@TeX{} mode, or any mode derived thereof. @item :context For all files in @ConTeXt{} mode. @item :classopt For class options of @LaTeX{} document. This is provided as pseudo-dialect for style hooks associated with class options. @end table @item A logical expression like: @table @code @item (or @var{dialect-expression1} @dots{} @var{dialect-expression_@var{n}}) For union of the sets of dialects corresponding to @var{dialect-expression1} through @var{dialect-expression_@var{n}} @item (and @var{dialect-expression1} @dots{} @var{dialect-expression_@var{n}}) For intersection of the sets of dialects corresponding to @var{dialect-expression1} through @var{dialect-expression_@var{n}} @item (nor @var{dialect-expression1} @dots{} @var{dialect-expression_@var{n}}) For complement of the union sets of dialects corresponding to @var{dialect-expression1} through @var{dialect-expression_@var{n}} relatively to the set of all supported dialects @item (not @var{dialect-expr}) For complement set of dialect corresponding to @var{dialect-expr} relatively to the set of all supported dialects @end table @end itemize @end defun In case of adding a style hook for @LaTeX{}, when calling function @code{TeX-add-style-hook} it is thought more futureproof for argument @var{dialect-expr} to pass constant @code{TeX-dialect} currently defined to @code{:latex}, rather than passing @code{:latex} directly. @defvr Constant TeX-dialect Default dialect for use with function @code{TeX-add-style-hook} for argument @var{dialect-expr} when the hook is to be run only on @LaTeX{} file, or any mode derived thereof. @end defvr @node Adding Macros @subsection Adding Support for Macros @cindex Adding macros @cindex Macros, adding @cindex Defining macros in style hooks The most common thing to define in a style hook is new symbols (@TeX{} macros). Most likely along with a description of the arguments to the function, since the symbol itself can be defined automatically. Here are a few examples from @file{latex.el}. @lisp (TeX-add-style-hook "latex" (lambda () (TeX-add-symbols '("arabic" TeX-arg-counter) '("label" TeX-arg-define-label) '("ref" TeX-arg-ref) '("newcommand" TeX-arg-define-macro [ "Number of arguments" ] t) '("newtheorem" TeX-arg-define-environment [ TeX-arg-environment "Numbered like" ] t [ TeX-arg-counter "Within counter" ])))) @end lisp @defun TeX-add-symbols @var{symbol} @dots{} Add each @var{symbol} to the list of known symbols. @end defun Each argument to @code{TeX-add-symbols} is a list describing one symbol. The head of the list is the name of the symbol, the remaining elements describe each argument. If there are no additional elements, the symbol will be inserted with point inside braces. Otherwise, each argument of this function should match an argument of the @TeX{} macro. What is done depends on the argument type. If a macro is defined multiple times, @AUCTeX{} will choose the one with the longest definition (i.e.@: the one with the most arguments). Thus, to overwrite @example '("tref" 1) ; @r{one argument} @end example you can specify @example '("tref" TeX-arg-ref ignore) ; @r{two arguments} @end example @code{ignore} is a function that does not do anything, so when you insert a @samp{tref} you will be prompted for a label and no more. You can use the following types of specifiers for arguments: @table @code @item string Use the string as a prompt to prompt for the argument. @item number Insert that many braces, leave point inside the first. 0 and -1 are special. 0 means that no braces are inserted. -1 means that braces are inserted around the macro and an active region (e.g.@: @samp{@{\tiny foo@}}). If there is no active region, no braces are inserted. @item nil Insert empty braces. @item t Insert empty braces, leave point between the braces. @item other symbols Call the symbol as a function. You can define your own hook, or use one of the predefined argument hooks. @item list If the car is a string, insert it as a prompt and the next element as initial input. Otherwise, call the car of the list with the remaining elements as arguments. @item vector Optional argument. If it has more than one element, parse it as a list, otherwise parse the only element as above. Use square brackets instead of curly braces, and is not inserted on empty user input. @end table A lot of argument hooks have already been defined. The first argument to all hooks is a flag indicating if it is an optional argument. It is up to the hook to determine what to do with the remaining arguments, if any. Typically the next argument is used to overwrite the default prompt. @ftable @code @item TeX-arg-conditional Implements if @var{expr} @var{then} @var{else}. If @var{expr} evaluates to true, parse @var{then} as an argument list, else parse @var{else} as an argument list. @item TeX-arg-literal Insert its arguments into the buffer. Used for specifying extra syntax for a macro. @item TeX-arg-free Parse its arguments but use no braces when they are inserted. @item TeX-arg-eval Evaluate arguments and insert the result in the buffer. @item TeX-arg-label Prompt for a label completing with known labels. If Ref@TeX{} is active, prompt for the reference format. @item TeX-arg-ref Prompt for a label completing with known labels. If Ref@TeX{} is active, do not prompt for the reference format. Usually, reference macros should use this function instead of @code{TeX-arg-label}. @item TeX-arg-index-tag Prompt for an index tag. This is the name of an index, not the entry. @item TeX-arg-index Prompt for an index entry completing with known entries. @item TeX-arg-length Prompt for a @LaTeX{} length completing with known lengths. @item TeX-arg-macro Prompt for a @TeX{} macro with completion. @item TeX-arg-date @vindex TeX-date-format Prompt for a date, defaulting to the current date. The format of the date is specified by the @code{TeX-date-format} option. If you want to change the format when the @samp{babel} package is loaded with a specific language, set @code{TeX-date-format} inside the appropriate language hook (for details @pxref{European}). @item TeX-arg-version Prompt for the version of a file, using as initial input the current date. @item TeX-arg-environment Prompt for a @LaTeX{} environment with completion. @item TeX-arg-cite @vindex TeX-arg-cite-note-p Prompt for a Bib@TeX{} citation. If the variable @code{TeX-arg-cite-note-p} is non-nil, ask also for optional note in citations. @item TeX-arg-counter Prompt for a @LaTeX{} counter completing with known counters. @item TeX-arg-savebox Prompt for a @LaTeX{} savebox completing with known saveboxes. @item TeX-arg-file Prompt for a filename in the current directory, and use it with the extension. @item TeX-arg-file-name Prompt for a filename and use as initial input the name of the file being visited in the current buffer, with extension. @item TeX-arg-file-name-sans-extension Prompt for a filename and use as initial input the name of the file being visited in the current buffer, without extension. @item TeX-arg-input-file @vindex TeX-arg-input-file-search Prompt for the name of an input file in @TeX{}'s search path, and use it without the extension. Run the style hooks for the file. (Note that the behavior (type of prompt and inserted file name) of the function can be controlled by the variable @code{TeX-arg-input-file-search}.) @item TeX-arg-define-label Prompt for a label completing with known labels. Add label to list of defined labels. @item TeX-arg-define-length Prompt for a @LaTeX{} length completing with known lengths. Add length to list of defined lengths. @item TeX-arg-define-macro Prompt for a @TeX{} macro with completion. Add macro to list of defined macros. @item TeX-arg-define-environment Prompt for a @LaTeX{} environment with completion. Add environment to list of defined environments. @item TeX-arg-define-cite Prompt for a Bib@TeX{} citation. @item TeX-arg-define-counter Prompt for a @LaTeX{} counter. @item TeX-arg-define-savebox Prompt for a @LaTeX{} savebox. @item TeX-arg-document @vindex LaTeX-default-style @vindex LaTeX-default-options @vindex TeX-arg-input-file-search @vindex LaTeX-style-list Prompt for a @LaTeX{} document class, using @code{LaTeX-default-style} as default value and @code{LaTeX-default-options} as default list of options. If the variable @code{TeX-arg-input-file-search} is t, you will be able to complete with all @LaTeX{} classes available on your system, otherwise classes listed in the variable @code{LaTeX-style-list} will be used for completion. It is also provided completion for options of many common classes. @item LaTeX-arg-usepackage @vindex TeX-arg-input-file-search Prompt for @LaTeX{} packages. If the variable @code{TeX-arg-input-file-search} is t, you will be able to complete with all @LaTeX{} packages available on your system. It is also provided completion for options of many common packages. @item TeX-arg-bibstyle Prompt for a Bib@TeX{} style file completing with all style available on your system. @item TeX-arg-bibliography Prompt for Bib@TeX{} database files completing with all databases available on your system. @item TeX-arg-corner Prompt for a @LaTeX{} side or corner position with completion. @item TeX-arg-lr Prompt for a @LaTeX{} side with completion. @item TeX-arg-tb Prompt for a @LaTeX{} side with completion. @item TeX-arg-pagestyle Prompt for a @LaTeX{} pagestyle with completion. @item TeX-arg-verb Prompt for delimiter and text. @item TeX-arg-verb-delim-or-brace Prompt for delimiter and text. This function is similar to @code{TeX-arg-verb}, but is intended for macros which take their argument enclosed in delimiters or in braces. @item TeX-arg-pair Insert a pair of numbers, use arguments for prompt. The numbers are surrounded by parentheses and separated with a comma. @item TeX-arg-size Insert width and height as a pair. No arguments. @item TeX-arg-coordinate Insert x and y coordinates as a pair. No arguments. @item LaTeX-arg-author @vindex LaTeX-default-author Prompt for document author, using @code{LaTeX-default-author} as initial input. @item TeX-read-key-val Prompt for a @samp{key=value} list of options and return them. @item TeX-arg-key-val Prompt for a @samp{key=value} list of options and insert it as a @TeX{} macro argument. @end ftable If you add new hooks, you can assume that point is placed directly after the previous argument, or after the macro name if this is the first argument. Please leave point located after the argument you are inserting. If you want point to be located somewhere else after all hooks have been processed, set the value of @code{TeX-exit-mark}. It will point nowhere, until the argument hook sets it. Some packages provide macros that are rarely useful to non-expert users. Those should be marked as expert macros using @code{TeX-declare-expert-macros}. @defun TeX-declare-expert-macros @var{style} @var{macros}... Declare @var{macros} as expert macros of @var{style}. Expert macros are completed depending on @code{TeX-complete-expert-commands}. @end defun @node Adding Environments @subsection Adding Support for Environments @cindex Adding environments @cindex Environments, adding @cindex Defining environments in style hooks Adding support for environments is very much like adding support for @TeX{} macros, except that each environment normally only takes one argument, an environment hook. The example is again a short version of @file{latex.el}. @lisp (TeX-add-style-hook "latex" (lambda () (LaTeX-add-environments '("document" LaTeX-env-document) '("enumerate" LaTeX-env-item) '("itemize" LaTeX-env-item) '("list" LaTeX-env-list)))) @end lisp It is completely up to the environment hook to insert the environment, but the function @code{LaTeX-insert-environment} may be of some help. The hook will be called with the name of the environment as its first argument, and extra arguments can be provided by adding them to a list after the hook. For simple environments with arguments, for example defined with @samp{\newenvironment}, you can make @AUCTeX{} prompt for the arguments by giving the prompt strings in the call to @code{LaTeX-add-environments}. The fact that an argument is optional can be indicated by wrapping the prompt string in a vector. For example, if you have defined a @code{loop} environment with the three arguments @var{from}, @var{to}, and @var{step}, you can add support for them in a style file. @example %% loop.sty \newenvironment@{loop@}[3]@{...@}@{...@} @end example @lisp ;; loop.el (TeX-add-style-hook "loop" (lambda () (LaTeX-add-environments '("loop" "From" "To" "Step")))) @end lisp If an environment is defined multiple times, @AUCTeX{} will choose the one with the longest definition. Thus, if you have an enumerate style file, and want it to replace the standard @LaTeX{} enumerate hook above, you could define an @file{enumerate.el} file as follows, and place it in the appropriate style directory. @lisp (TeX-add-style-hook "latex" (lambda () (LaTeX-add-environments '("enumerate" LaTeX-env-enumerate foo)))) (defun LaTeX-env-enumerate (environment &optional _ignore) ...) @end lisp The symbol @code{foo} will be passed to @code{LaTeX-env-enumerate} as the second argument, but since we only added it to overwrite the definition in @file{latex.el} it is just ignored. @defun LaTeX-add-environments @var{env} @dots{} Add each @var{env} to list of loaded environments. @end defun @defun LaTeX-insert-environment @var{env} [ @var{extra} ] Insert environment of type @var{env}, with optional argument @var{extra}. @end defun Following is a list of available hooks for @code{LaTeX-add-environments}: @ftable @code @item LaTeX-env-item Insert the given environment and the first item. @item LaTeX-env-figure Insert the given figure-like environment with a caption and a label. @item LaTeX-env-array Insert the given array-like environment with position and column specifications. @item LaTeX-env-label Insert the given environment with a label. @item LaTeX-env-list Insert the given list-like environment, a specifier for the label and the first item. @item LaTeX-env-minipage Insert the given minipage-like environment with position and width specifications. @item LaTeX-env-tabular* Insert the given tabular*-like environment with width, position and column specifications. @item LaTeX-env-picture Insert the given environment with width and height specifications. @item LaTeX-env-bib Insert the given environment with a label for a bibitem. @item LaTeX-env-contents Insert the given environment with a filename as its argument. @item LaTeX-env-args Insert the given environment with arguments. You can use this as a hook in case you want to specify multiple complex arguments just like in elements of @code{TeX-add-symbols}. This is most useful if the specification of arguments to be prompted for with strings and strings wrapped in a vector as described above is too limited. Here is an example from @file{listings.el} which calls a function with one argument in order to prompt for a @samp{key=value} list to be inserted as an optional argument of the @samp{lstlisting} environment: @lisp (LaTeX-add-environments '("lstlisting" LaTeX-env-args [TeX-arg-key-val LaTeX-listings-key-val-options])) @end lisp @end ftable Some packages provide environments that are rarely useful to non-expert users. Those should be marked as expert environments using @code{LaTeX-declare-expert-environments}. @defun LaTeX-declare-expert-environments @var{style} @var{environments}... Declare @var{environments} as expert environments of @var{style}. Expert environments are completed depending on @code{TeX-complete-expert-commands}. @end defun @node Adding Other @subsection Adding or Examining Other Information @cindex Adding bibliographies @cindex Bibliographies, adding @cindex Examining package/class options @cindex package/class options, Examining @cindex Viewer predicates @cindex Defining bibliographies in style hooks @cindex Adding labels @cindex Labels, adding @cindex Defining labels in style hooks @cindex Adding other information @cindex Other information, adding @cindex Defining other information in style hooks @subsubsection Adding bibliographies in style hooks You can also specify bibliographical databases and labels in the style file. This is probably of little use, since this information will usually be automatically generated from the @TeX{} file anyway. @defun LaTeX-add-bibliographies @var{bibliography} @dots{} Add each @var{bibliography} to list of loaded bibliographies. @end defun @defun LaTeX-add-labels @var{label} @dots{} Add each @var{label} to the list of known labels. @end defun @subsubsection Examining package/class options In @LaTeX{} documents, style hooks can find the package names and those options given as optional argument(s) of @code{\usepackage} in @code{LaTeX-provided-package-options}. @defvar LaTeX-provided-package-options Buffer local variable holding alist of options provided to @LaTeX{} packages. Each element is a cons cell @code{(@var{package} . @var{option-list})}. For example, its value will be @lisp (("babel" . ("german")) ("geometry" . ("a4paper" "top=2cm" "bottom=2cm" "left=2.5cm" "right=2.5cm")) ...) @end lisp @end defvar You can examine whether there is a specific package-option pair by @code{LaTeX-provided-package-options-member}. @defun LaTeX-provided-package-options-member @var{package} @var{option} Return non-@code{nil} if @var{option} has been given to @var{package}. The value is actually the tail of the list of options given to @var{package}. @end defun There are similar facilities for class names and those options given in @code{\documentclass} declaration. @defvar LaTeX-provided-class-options Buffer local variable holding alist of options provided to @LaTeX{} classes. Each element is a cons cell @code{(@var{class} . @var{option-list})}. For example, its value will be @lisp (("book" . ("a4paper" "11pt" "openany" "fleqn")) ...) @end lisp @end defvar @defun LaTeX-provided-class-options-member @var{class} @var{option} Return non-@code{nil} if @var{option} has been given to @var{class}. The value is actually the tail of the list of options given to @var{class}. @end defun @defun LaTeX-match-class-option @var{regexp} Check if a documentclass option matching @var{regexp} is active. Return first found class option matching @var{regexp}, or nil if not found. @end defun These functions are also useful to implement customized predicate(s) in @code{TeX-view-predicate-list}. @xref{Starting Viewers}. @node Hacking the Parser @subsection Automatic Extraction of New Things @cindex Parsing new macros @cindex @file{macro.tex} @cindex @file{macro.el} @cindex Changing the parser The automatic @TeX{} information extractor works by searching for regular expressions in the @TeX{} files, and storing the matched information. You can add support for new constructs to the parser, something that is needed when you add new commands to define symbols. For example, in the file @file{macro.tex} I define the following macro. @example \newcommand@{\newmacro@}[5]@{% \def#1@{#3\index@{#4@@#5~cite@{#4@}@}\nocite@{#4@}@}% \def#2@{#5\index@{#4@@#5~cite@{#4@}@}\nocite@{#4@}@}% @} @end example @AUCTeX{} will automatically figure out that @samp{newmacro} is a macro that takes five arguments. However, it is not smart enough to automatically see that each time we use the macro, two new macros are defined. We can specify this information in a style hook file. @lisp ;;; macro.el --- Special code for my own macro file. ;;; Code: (defvar TeX-newmacro-regexp '("\\\\newmacro@{\\\\\\([a-zA-Z]+\\)@}@{\\\\\\([a-zA-Z]+\\)@}" (1 2) TeX-auto-multi) "Matches \\newmacro definitions.") (defvar TeX-auto-multi nil "Temporary for parsing \\newmacro definitions.") (defun TeX-macro-cleanup () "Move symbols from `TeX-auto-multi' to `TeX-auto-symbol'." (mapc (lambda (list) (mapc (lambda (symbol) (setq TeX-auto-symbol (cons symbol TeX-auto-symbol))) list)) TeX-auto-multi)) (defun TeX-macro-prepare () "Clear `Tex-auto-multi' before use." (setq TeX-auto-multi nil)) (add-hook 'TeX-auto-prepare-hook #'TeX-macro-prepare) (add-hook 'TeX-auto-cleanup-hook #'TeX-macro-cleanup) (TeX-add-style-hook "macro" (lambda () (TeX-auto-add-regexp TeX-newmacro-regexp) (TeX-add-symbols '("newmacro" TeX-arg-macro (TeX-arg-macro "Capitalized macro: \\") t "BibTeX entry: " nil)))) ;;; macro.el ends here @end lisp When this file is first loaded, it adds a new entry to @code{TeX-newmacro-regexp}, and defines a function to be called before the parsing starts, and one to be called after the parsing is done. It also declares a variable to contain the data collected during parsing. Finally, it adds a style hook which describes the @samp{newmacro} macro, as we have seen it before. So the general strategy is: Add a new entry to @code{TeX-newmacro-regexp}. Declare a variable to contain intermediate data during parsing. Add hook to be called before and after parsing. In this case, the hook before parsing just initializes the variable, and the hook after parsing collects the data from the variable, and adds them to the list of symbols found. @defvar TeX-auto-regexp-list List of regular expressions matching @TeX{} macro definitions. The list has the following format ((@var{regexp} @var{match} @var{table}) @dots{}), that is, each entry is a list with three elements. @var{regexp}. Regular expression matching the macro we want to parse. @var{match}. A number or list of numbers, each representing one parenthesized subexpression matched by @var{regexp}. @var{table}. The symbol table to store the data. This can be a function, in which case the function is called with the argument @var{match}. Use @code{TeX-match-buffer} to get match data. If it is not a function, it is presumed to be the name of a variable containing a list of match data. The matched data (a string if @var{match} is a number, a list of strings if @var{match} is a list of numbers) is put in front of the table. @end defvar @defvar TeX-auto-prepare-hook nil List of functions to be called before parsing a @TeX{} file. @end defvar @defvar TeX-auto-cleanup-hook nil List of functions to be called after parsing a @TeX{} file. @end defvar @node Appendices @appendix Copying, Changes, Development, FAQ, Texinfo Mode @menu * Copying this Manual:: * Changes:: * Development:: * FAQ:: * Texinfo mode:: @end menu @node Copying this Manual @appendixsec Copying this Manual @ifinfo The copyright notice for this manual is: @insertcopying @end ifinfo The full license text can be read here: @menu * GNU Free Documentation License:: License for copying this manual. @end menu @lowersections @include fdl.texi @raisesections @node Changes @appendixsec Changes and New Features @lowersections @include changes.texi @raisesections @subheading Older versions See the file @file{history.texi} for older changes. @node Development @appendixsec Future Development @lowersections @include todo.texi @raisesections @node FAQ @appendixsec Frequently Asked Questions @lowersections @include faq.texi @raisesections @node Texinfo mode @appendixsec Features specific to @AUCTeX{}'s Texinfo major mode @AUCTeX{} includes a major mode for editting Texinfo files. This major mode is not the same mode as the native Texinfo mode (@pxref{Texinfo Mode,,, texinfo,Texinfo}) of Emacs, although they have the same name. However, @AUCTeX{} still relies on a number of functions from the native Texinfo mode. The following text describes which functionality is offered by @AUCTeX{} and which by the native Texinfo mode. This should enable you to decide when to consult the @AUCTeX{} manual and when the manual of the native mode. And in case you are a seasoned user of the native mode, the information should help you to swiftly get to know the @AUCTeX{}-specific commands. @menu * Exploiting:: How @AUCTeX{} and the native mode work together * Superseding:: Where the native mode is superseded * Mapping:: Where key bindings are mapped to the native mode * Unbinding:: Which native mode key bindings are missing @end menu @node Exploiting @appendixsubsec How @AUCTeX{} and the native mode work together In a nutshell the split between @AUCTeX{} Texinfo mode, and native Texinfo mode is as follows: @itemize @item Most of the editing (environment creation, commenting, font command insertions) and/or processing commands (e.g.@: compiling or printing) which are available in other @AUCTeX{} modes are also handled by @AUCTeX{} in Texinfo mode. @item Texinfo-related features (e.g.@: info node linkage or menu creation) rely on the commands provided by the native Texinfo mode. @AUCTeX{} provides the key bindings to reach these functions, keeping the same keys as in native Texinfo whenever possible, or similar ones otherwise. @end itemize @node Superseding @appendixsubsec Where the native mode is superseded This section is directed to users of the native Texinfo mode switching to @AUCTeX{}. It follows the summary of the native mode (@pxref{Texinfo Mode Summary,,,texinfo,Texinfo}) and lists which of its commands are no longer of use. @table @asis @item Insert commands In the native Texinfo mode, frequently used Texinfo commands can be inserted with key bindings of the form @kbd{C-c C-c @var{k}} where @var{k} differs for each Texinfo command; @kbd{c} inserts @code{@@code}, @kbd{d} inserts @code{@@dfn}, @kbd{k} @code{@@kbd}, etc. In @AUCTeX{} commands are inserted with the key binding @kbd{C-c C-m} instead which prompts for the macro to be inserted. For font selection commands (like @code{@@b}, @code{@@i}, or @code{@@emph}) and a few related ones (like @code{@@var}, @code{@@key} or @code{@@code}) there are bindings which insert the respective macros directly. They have the form @kbd{C-c C-f @var{k}} or @kbd{C-c C-f C-@var{k}} and call the function @code{TeX-font}. Type @kbd{C-c C-f @key{RET}} to get a list of supported commands. Note that the prefix argument is not handled the same way by @AUCTeX{}. Note also that the node insertion command from the native mode (@code{texinfo-insert-@@node}) can still accessed from the Texinfo menu in @AUCTeX{}. @item Insert braces In @AUCTeX{} braces can be inserted with the same key binding as in the native Texinfo mode: @kbd{C-c @{}. But @AUCTeX{} uses its own function for the feature: @code{TeX-insert-braces}. @item Insert environments The native Texinfo mode does not insert full environments. Instead, it provides the function @code{texinfo-insert-@@end} (mapped to @kbd{C-c C-c e}) for closing an open environment with a matching @code{@@end} statement. In @AUCTeX{} you can insert full environments, i.e.@: both the opening and closing statements, with the function @code{Texinfo-environment} (mapped to @kbd{C-c C-e}). @item Format info files with makeinfo and @TeX{} In the native Texinfo mode there are various functions and bindings to format a region or the whole buffer for info or to typeset the respective text. For example, there is @code{makeinfo-buffer} (mapped to @kbd{C-c C-m C-b}) which runs @samp{makeinfo} on the buffer or there is @code{texinfo-tex-buffer} (mapped to @kbd{C-c C-t C-b}) which runs @TeX{} on the buffer in order to produce a @acronym{DVI} file. In @AUCTeX{} different commands for formatting or typesetting can be invoked through the function @code{TeX-command-master} (mapped to @kbd{C-c C-c}). After typing @kbd{C-c C-c}, you can select the desired command, e.g @samp{Makeinfo} or @samp{TeX}, through a prompt in the mini buffer. Note that you can make, say @samp{Makeinfo}, the default by adding this statement in your init file: @lisp (add-hook 'Texinfo-mode-hook (lambda () (setq TeX-command-default "Makeinfo"))) @end lisp Note also that @kbd{C-c C-c Makeinfo @key{RET}} is not completely functionally equivalent to @code{makeinfo-buffer} as the latter will display the resulting info file in Emacs, showing the node corresponding to the position in the source file, just after a successful compilation. This is why, while using @AUCTeX{}, invoking @code{makeinfo-buffer} might still be more convenient. Note also that in the case of a multifile document, @kbd{C-c C-c} in @AUCTeX{} will work on the whole document (provided that the file variable @code{TeX-master} is set correctly), while @code{makeinfo-buffer} in the native mode will process only the current buffer, provided at the @code{@@setfilename} statement is provided. @item Produce indexes and print The native Texinfo mode provides the binding @kbd{C-c C-t C-i} (@code{texinfo-texindex}) for producing an index and the bindings @kbd{C-c C-t C-p} (@code{texinfo-tex-print}) and @kbd{C-c C-t C-q} (@code{tex-show-print-queue}) for printing and showing the printer queue. These are superseded by the respective commands available through @kbd{C-c C-c} (@code{TeX-command-master}) in @AUCTeX{}: @samp{Index}, @samp{Print}, and @samp{Queue}. @c FIXME: "Index" runs makeindex, not texindex. No entry in @c TeX-command-list runs texindex. @item Kill jobs The command @kbd{C-c C-t C-k} (@code{tex-kill-job}) in the native mode is superseded by @kbd{C-c C-k} (@code{TeX-kill-job}) in @AUCTeX{}. @end table @node Mapping @appendixsubsec Where key bindings are mapped to the native mode This node follows the native Texinfo mode summary (@pxref{Texinfo Mode Summary,,,texinfo,Texinfo}) and lists only those commands to which @AUCTeX{} provides a keybinding. Basically all commands of the native mode related to producing menus and interlinking nodes are mapped to same or similar keys in @AUCTeX{}, while a few insertion commands are mapped to @AUCTeX{}-like keys. @table @asis @item @code{@@item} insertion The binding @kbd{C-c C-c i} for the insertion of @code{@@item} in the native mode is mapped to @kbd{M-@key{RET}} or @kbd{C-c C-j} in @AUCTeX{}, similar to other @AUCTeX{} modes. @item @code{@@end} insertion The binding @kbd{C-c C-c e} for closing a @code{@@@var{foo}} command by a corresponding @code{@@end @var{foo}} statement in the native mode is mapped to @kbd{C-c ]} in @AUCTeX{}, similar to other @AUCTeX{} modes. @item Move out of balanced braces The binding @kbd{C-c @}} (@code{up-list}) is available both in the native mode and in @AUCTeX{}. (This is because the command is not implemented in either mode but a native Emacs command.) However, in @AUCTeX{}, you cannot use @kbd{C-c ]} for this, as it is used for @code{@@end} insertion. @item Update pointers The bindings @kbd{C-c C-u C-n} (@code{texinfo-update-node}) and @kbd{C-c C-u C-e} (@code{texinfo-every-node-update}) from the native mode are available in @AUCTeX{} as well. @item Update menus The bindings @kbd{C-c C-u m} (@code{texinfo-master-menu}), @kbd{C-c C-u C-m} (@code{texinfo-make-menu}), and @kbd{C-c C-u C-a} (@code{texinfo-all-menus-update}) from the native mode are available in @AUCTeX{} as well. The command @code{texinfo-start-menu-description}, bound to @kbd{C-c C-c C-d} in the native mode, is bound to @kbd{C-c C-u C-d} in @AUCTeX{} instead. @end table @node Unbinding @appendixsubsec Which native mode key bindings are missing The following commands from the native commands might still be useful when working with @AUCTeX{}, however, they are not accessible with a key binding any longer. @table @asis @item @code{@@node} insertion The node insertion command, mapped to @kbd{C-c C-c n} in the native mode, is not mapped to any key in @AUCTeX{}. You can still access it through the Texinfo menu, though. Another alternative is to use the @kbd{C-c C-m} binding for macro insertion in @AUCTeX{}. @item Show the section structure The command @code{texinfo-show-structure} (@kbd{C-c C-s}) from the native mode does not have a key binding in @AUCTeX{}. The binding is used by @AUCTeX{} for sectioning. @end table @node Indices @unnumbered Indices @menu * Key Index:: * Function Index:: * Variable Index:: * Concept Index:: @end menu @node Key Index @unnumberedsec Key Index @printindex ky @node Function Index @unnumberedsec Function Index @printindex fn @node Variable Index @unnumberedsec Variable Index @printindex vr @node Concept Index @unnumberedsec Concept Index @printindex cp @bye @c Local Variables: @c mode: texinfo @c coding: utf-8 @c TeX-master: t @c End: