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This section describes the basic interface for reading from the minibuffer with completion.
This function reads a string in the minibuffer, assisting the user by providing completion. It activates the minibuffer with prompt prompt, which must be a string.
The actual completion is done by passing the completion table collection and the completion predicate predicate to the function
try-completion
(see Basic Completion). This happens in certain commands bound in the local keymaps used for completion. Some of these commands also calltest-completion
. Thus, if predicate is non-nil
, it should be compatible with collection andcompletion-ignore-case
. See Definition of test-completion.See Programmed Completion, for detailed requirements when collection is a function.
The value of the optional argument require-match determines how the user may exit the minibuffer:
- If
nil
, the usual minibuffer exit commands work regardless of the input in the minibuffer.- If
t
, the usual minibuffer exit commands won't exit unless the input completes to an element of collection.- If
confirm
, the user can exit with any input, but is asked for confirmation if the input is not an element of collection.- If
confirm-after-completion
, the user can exit with any input, but is asked for confirmation if the preceding command was a completion command (i.e., one of the commands inminibuffer-confirm-exit-commands
) and the resulting input is not an element of collection. See Completion Commands.- Any other value of require-match behaves like
t
, except that the exit commands won't exit if it performs completion.However, empty input is always permitted, regardless of the value of require-match; in that case,
completing-read
returns the first element of default, if it is a list;""
, if default isnil
; or default. The string or strings in default are also available to the user through the history commands.The function
completing-read
usesminibuffer-local-completion-map
as the keymap if require-match isnil
, and usesminibuffer-local-must-match-map
if require-match is non-nil
. See Completion Commands.The argument history specifies which history list variable to use for saving the input and for minibuffer history commands. It defaults to
minibuffer-history
. See Minibuffer History.The argument initial is mostly deprecated; we recommend using a non-
nil
value only in conjunction with specifying a cons cell for history. See Initial Input. For default input, use default instead.If the argument inherit-input-method is non-
nil
, then the minibuffer inherits the current input method (see Input Methods) and the setting ofenable-multibyte-characters
(see Text Representations) from whichever buffer was current before entering the minibuffer.If the variable
completion-ignore-case
is non-nil
, completion ignores case when comparing the input against the possible matches. See Basic Completion. In this mode of operation, predicate must also ignore case, or you will get surprising results.Here's an example of using
completing-read
:(completing-read "Complete a foo: " '(("foobar1" 1) ("barfoo" 2) ("foobaz" 3) ("foobar2" 4)) nil t "fo") ;; After evaluation of the preceding expression, ;; the following appears in the minibuffer: ---------- Buffer: Minibuffer ---------- Complete a foo: fo-!- ---------- Buffer: Minibuffer ----------If the user then types <DEL> <DEL> b <RET>,
completing-read
returnsbarfoo
.The
completing-read
function binds variables to pass information to the commands that actually do completion. They are described in the following section.
The value of this variable must be a function, which is called by
completing-read
to actually do its work. It should accept the same arguments ascompleting-read
. This can be bound to a different function to completely override the normal behavior ofcompleting-read
.