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If you want to find all matches for a regexp in part of the buffer,
and replace them, the best way is to write an explicit loop using
re-search-forward
and replace-match
, like this:
(while (re-search-forward "foo[ \t]+bar" nil t) (replace-match "foobar"))
See Replacing the Text that Matched, for a
description of replace-match
.
However, replacing matches in a string is more complex, especially if you want to do it efficiently. So Emacs provides a function to do this.
This function copies string and searches it for matches for regexp, and replaces them with rep. It returns the modified copy. If start is non-
nil
, the search for matches starts at that index in string, so matches starting before that index are not changed.This function uses
replace-match
to do the replacement, and it passes the optional arguments fixedcase, literal and subexp along toreplace-match
.Instead of a string, rep can be a function. In that case,
replace-regexp-in-string
calls rep for each match, passing the text of the match as its sole argument. It collects the value rep returns and passes that toreplace-match
as the replacement string. The match data at this point are the result of matching regexp against a substring of string.
If you want to write a command along the lines of query-replace
,
you can use perform-replace
to do the work.
This function is the guts of
query-replace
and related commands. It searches for occurrences of from-string in the text between positions start and end and replaces some or all of them. If start isnil
(or omitted), point is used instead, and the end of the buffer's accessible portion is used for end. (If the optional argument backward is non-nil
, the search starts at end and goes backward.)If query-flag is
nil
, it replaces all occurrences; otherwise, it asks the user what to do about each one.If regexp-flag is non-
nil
, then from-string is considered a regular expression; otherwise, it must match literally. If delimited-flag is non-nil
, then only replacements surrounded by word boundaries are considered.The argument replacements specifies what to replace occurrences with. If it is a string, that string is used. It can also be a list of strings, to be used in cyclic order.
If replacements is a cons cell,
(
function.
data)
, this means to call function after each match to get the replacement text. This function is called with two arguments: data, and the number of replacements already made.If repeat-count is non-
nil
, it should be an integer. Then it specifies how many times to use each of the strings in the replacements list before advancing cyclically to the next one.If from-string contains upper-case letters, then
perform-replace
bindscase-fold-search
tonil
, and it uses the replacements without altering their case.Normally, the keymap
query-replace-map
defines the possible user responses for queries. The argument map, if non-nil
, specifies a keymap to use instead ofquery-replace-map
.Non-
nil
region-noncontiguous-p means that the region between start and end is composed of noncontiguous pieces. The most common example of this is a rectangular region, where the pieces are separated by newline characters.This function uses one of two functions to search for the next occurrence of from-string. These functions are specified by the values of two variables:
replace-re-search-function
andreplace-search-function
. The former is called when the argument regexp-flag is non-nil
, the latter when it isnil
.
This variable holds a special keymap that defines the valid user responses for
perform-replace
and the commands that use it, as well asy-or-n-p
andmap-y-or-n-p
. This map is unusual in two ways:
- The key bindings are not commands, just symbols that are meaningful to the functions that use this map.
- Prefix keys are not supported; each key binding must be for a single-event key sequence. This is because the functions don't use
read-key-sequence
to get the input; instead, they read a single event and look it up “by hand”.
Here are the meaningful bindings for query-replace-map
.
Several of them are meaningful only for query-replace
and
friends.
act
skip
exit
exit-prefix
exit
, but add the key that was pressed to
unread-command-events
(see Event Input Misc).
act-and-exit
act-and-show
automatic
backup
undo
undo-all
edit
edit-replacement
delete-and-edit
recenter
scroll-up
scroll-down
scroll-other-window
scroll-other-window-down
y-or-n-p
and related functions use this
answer.
quit
y-or-n-p
and related functions
use this answer.
help
This variable holds a keymap that extends
query-replace-map
by providing additional keybindings that are useful in multi-buffer replacements. The additional bindings are:
automatic-all
- Answer this question and all subsequent questions in the series with “yes”, without further user interaction, for all remaining buffers.
exit-current
- Answer this question “no”, and give up on the entire series of questions for the current buffer. Continue to the next buffer in the sequence.
This variable specifies a function that
perform-replace
calls to search for the next string to replace. Its default value issearch-forward
. Any other value should name a function of 3 arguments: the first 3 arguments ofsearch-forward
(see String Search).
This variable specifies a function that
perform-replace
calls to search for the next regexp to replace. Its default value isre-search-forward
. Any other value should name a function of 3 arguments: the first 3 arguments ofre-search-forward
(see Regexp Search).