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The overlay arrow is useful for directing the user's attention to a particular line in a buffer. For example, in the modes used for interface to debuggers, the overlay arrow indicates the line of code about to be executed. This feature has nothing to do with overlays (see Overlays).
This variable holds the string to display to call attention to a particular line, or
nil
if the arrow feature is not in use. On a graphical display the contents of the string are ignored; instead a glyph is displayed in the fringe area to the left of the display area.
This variable holds a marker that indicates where to display the overlay arrow. It should point at the beginning of a line. On a non-graphical display the arrow text appears at the beginning of that line, overlaying any text that would otherwise appear. Since the arrow is usually short, and the line usually begins with indentation, normally nothing significant is overwritten.
The overlay-arrow string is displayed in any given buffer if the value of
overlay-arrow-position
in that buffer points into that buffer. Thus, it is possible to display multiple overlay arrow strings by creating buffer-local bindings ofoverlay-arrow-position
. However, it is usually cleaner to useoverlay-arrow-variable-list
to achieve this result.
You can do a similar job by creating an overlay with a
before-string
property. See Overlay Properties.
You can define multiple overlay arrows via the variable
overlay-arrow-variable-list
.
This variable's value is a list of variables, each of which specifies the position of an overlay arrow. The variable
overlay-arrow-position
has its normal meaning because it is on this list.
Each variable on this list can have properties
overlay-arrow-string
and overlay-arrow-bitmap
that
specify an overlay arrow string (for text terminals) or fringe bitmap
(for graphical terminals) to display at the corresponding overlay
arrow position. If either property is not set, the default
overlay-arrow-string
or overlay-arrow
fringe indicator
is used.