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This section describes the keymaps, commands and user options used in the minibuffer to do completion.
completing-read uses this value as the local keymap when an
exact match of one of the completions is not required. By default, this
keymap makes the following bindings:
minibuffer-completion-help
minibuffer-complete-word
minibuffer-complete
with other characters bound as in minibuffer-local-map
(see section 20.2 Reading Text Strings with the Minibuffer).
completing-read uses this value as the local keymap when an
exact match of one of the completions is required. Therefore, no keys
are bound to exit-minibuffer, the command that exits the
minibuffer unconditionally. By default, this keymap makes the following
bindings:
minibuffer-completion-help
minibuffer-complete-word
minibuffer-complete
minibuffer-complete-and-exit
minibuffer-complete-and-exit
with other characters bound as in minibuffer-local-map.
completing-read passes to try-completion. It is used by
minibuffer completion commands such as minibuffer-complete-word.
completing-read
passes to try-completion. The variable is also used by the other
minibuffer completion functions.
minibuffer-complete-word does not add any characters beyond the
first character that is not a word constituent. See section 35. Syntax Tables.
minibuffer-completion-confirm is nil. If confirmation
is required, it is given by repeating this command
immediately--the command is programmed to work without confirmation
when run twice in succession.
nil, Emacs asks for
confirmation of a completion before exiting the minibuffer. The
function minibuffer-complete-and-exit checks the value of this
variable before it exits.
all-completions
using the value of the variable minibuffer-completion-table as
the collection argument, and the value of
minibuffer-completion-predicate as the predicate argument.
The list of completions is displayed as text in a buffer named
`*Completions*'.
standard-output, usually a buffer. (See section 19. Reading and Printing Lisp Objects, for more
information about streams.) The argument completions is normally
a list of completions just returned by all-completions, but it
does not have to be. Each element may be a symbol or a string, either
of which is simply printed, or a list of two strings, which is printed
as if the strings were concatenated.
This function is called by minibuffer-completion-help. The
most common way to use it is together with
with-output-to-temp-buffer, like this:
(with-output-to-temp-buffer "*Completions*"
(display-completion-list
(all-completions (buffer-string) my-alist)))
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nil, the completion commands
automatically display a list of possible completions whenever nothing
can be completed because the next character is not uniquely determined.
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