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nil, isn't a string, and doesn't refer to
text in a file, then it is evaluated to obtain a string.
Finally, documentation-property passes the string through
substitute-command-keys to substitute actual key bindings,
unless verbatim is non-nil.
(documentation-property 'command-line-processed
'variable-documentation)
=> "Non-nil once command line has been processed"
(symbol-plist 'command-line-processed)
=> (variable-documentation 188902)
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If function is a symbol, this function first looks for the
function-documentation property of that symbol; if that has a
non-nil value, the documentation comes from that value (if the
value is not a string, it is evaluated). If function is not a
symbol, or if it has no function-documentation property, then
documentation extracts the documentation string from the actual
function definition, reading it from a file if called for.
Finally, unless verbatim is non-nil, it calls
substitute-command-keys so as to return a value containing the
actual (current) key bindings.
The function documentation signals a void-function error
if function has no function definition. However, it is OK if
the function definition has no documentation string. In that case,
documentation returns nil.
Here is an example of using the two functions, documentation and
documentation-property, to display the documentation strings for
several symbols in a `*Help*' buffer.
(defun describe-symbols (pattern)
"Describe the Emacs Lisp symbols matching PATTERN.
All symbols that have PATTERN in their name are described
in the `*Help*' buffer."
(interactive "sDescribe symbols matching: ")
(let ((describe-func
(function
(lambda (s)
;; Print description of symbol.
(if (fboundp s) ; It is a function.
(princ
(format "%s\t%s\n%s\n\n" s
(if (commandp s)
(let ((keys (where-is-internal s)))
(if keys
(concat
"Keys: "
(mapconcat 'key-description
keys " "))
"Keys: none"))
"Function")
(or (documentation s)
"not documented"))))
(if (boundp s) ; It is a variable.
(princ
(format "%s\t%s\n%s\n\n" s
(if (user-variable-p s)
"Option " "Variable")
(or (documentation-property
s 'variable-documentation)
"not documented")))))))
sym-list)
;; Build a list of symbols that match pattern.
(mapatoms (function
(lambda (sym)
(if (string-match pattern (symbol-name sym))
(setq sym-list (cons sym sym-list))))))
;; Display the data.
(with-output-to-temp-buffer "*Help*"
(mapcar describe-func (sort sym-list 'string<))
(print-help-return-message))))
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The describe-symbols function works like apropos,
but provides more information.
(describe-symbols "goal") ---------- Buffer: *Help* ---------- goal-column Option *Semipermanent goal column for vertical motion, as set by ... set-goal-column Keys: C-x C-n Set the current horizontal position as a goal for C-n and C-p. Those commands will move to this position in the line moved to rather than trying to keep the same horizontal position. With a non-nil argument, clears out the goal column so that C-n and C-p resume vertical motion. The goal column is stored in the variable `goal-column'. temporary-goal-column Variable Current goal column for vertical motion. It is the column where point was at the start of current run of vertical motion commands. When the `track-eol' feature is doing its job, the value is 9999. ---------- Buffer: *Help* ---------- |
The asterisk `*' as the first character of a variable's doc string,
as shown above for the goal-column variable, means that it is a
user option; see the description of defvar in 11.5 Defining Global Variables.
Emacs reads the file filename from the `emacs/etc' directory.
When the dumped Emacs is later executed, the same file will be looked
for in the directory doc-directory. Usually filename is
"DOC-version".
"DOC-version" that contains documentation strings for
built-in and preloaded functions and variables.
In most cases, this is the same as data-directory. They may be
different when you run Emacs from the directory where you built it,
without actually installing it. See data-directory in 24.5 Help Functions.
In older Emacs versions, exec-directory was used for this.
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