oracular (3) erlang_mode.3erl.gz

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NAME

       erlang.el - Erlang mode for Emacs

DESCRIPTION

       Possibly the most important feature of an editor designed for programmers is the ability to indent a line
       of code in accordance with the structure of the programming language. The Erlang mode  does,  of  course,
       provide  this feature. The layout used is based on the common use of the language. The mode also provides
       things as syntax highlighting, electric commands, module name  verification,  comment  support  including
       paragraph filling, skeletons, tags support etc.

       In  the following descriptions the use of the word Point means: "Point can be seen as the position of the
       cursor. More precisely, the point is the position between two characters while the cursor is  drawn  over
       the character following the point".

INDENT

       The following command are directly available for indentation.

         * TAB (erlang-indent-command) - Indents the current line of code.

         * M-C-\ (indent-region) - Indents all lines in the region.

         * M-l (indent-for-comment) - Insert a comment character to the right of the code on the line (if any).

       Lines containing comment are indented differently depending on the number of %-characters used:

         * Lines  with  one  %-character  is  indented  to the right of the code. The column is specified by the
           variable comment-column, by default column 48 is used.

         * Lines with two %-characters will be indented to the same depth as code would have been  in  the  same
           situation.

         * Lines with three of more %-characters are indented to the left margin.

         * C-c C-q (erlang-indent-function) - Indents the current Erlang function.

         * M-x erlang-indent-clause RET
            -Indent the current Erlang clause.

         * M-x erlang-indent-current-buffer RET - Indent the entire buffer.

EDIT - FILL COMMENT

       When  editing normal text in text mode you can let Emacs reformat the text by the fill-paragraph command.
       This command will not work for comments since it will treat the comment characters as words.

       The Erlang editing mode provides a command that knows about the Erlang comment structure and can be  used
       to fill text paragraphs in comments. Ex:

             %% This is   just a very simple test to show
             %% how the Erlang fill
             %% paragraph   command works.

       Clearly,  the  text  is  badly  formatted.  Instead  of formatting this paragraph line by line, let's try
       erlang-fill-paragraph by pressing M-q. The result is:

             %% This is just a very simple test to show how the Erlang fill
             %% paragraph command works.

EDIT - COMMENT/UNCOMMENT REGION

       C-c C-c will put comment characters at the beginning of all lines in a marked region. If you want to have
       two comment characters instead of one you can do C-u 2 C-c C-c

       C-c C-u will undo a comment-region command.

EDIT - MOVING THE MARKER

         * C-a M-a  (erlang-beginning-of-function) - Move the point to the beginning of the current or preceding
           Erlang function. With an numeric argument (ex C-u 2 C-a M-a) the function skips backwards  over  this
           many  Erlang  functions.  Should  the  argument  be negative the point is moved to the beginning of a
           function below the current function.

         * M-C-a  (erlang-beginning-of-clause) - As above but move point to the  beginning  of  the  current  or
           preceding Erlang clause.

         * C-a M-e  (erlang-end-of-function) - Move to the end of the current or following Erlang function. With
           an numeric argument (ex C-u 2 C-a M-e) the function skips backwards over this many Erlang  functions.
           Should  the  argument  be  negative  the  point  is  moved to the end of a function below the current
           function.

         * M-C-e  (erlang-end-of-clause) - As above but move point to the end of the current or following Erlang
           clause.

EDIT - MARKING

         * C-c  M-h  (erlang-mark-function)  -  Put  the region around the current Erlang function. The point is
           placed in the beginning and the mark at the end of the function.

         * M-C-h  (erlang-mark-clause) Put the region around the current Erlang clause. The point is  placed  in
           the beginning and the mark at the end of the function.

EDIT - FUNCTION HEADER COMMANDS

         * C-c  C-j (erlang-generate-new-clause) - Create a new clause in the current Erlang function. The point
           is placed between the parentheses of the argument list.

         * C-c C-y (erlang-clone-arguments) - Copy the function arguments of the preceding Erlang  clause.  This
           command is useful when defining a new clause with almost the same argument as the preceding.

EDIT - ARROWS

         * C-c C-a (erlang-align-arrows) - aligns arrows after clauses inside a region.

                 Example:

                 sum(L) -> sum(L, 0).
                 sum([H|T], Sum) -> sum(T, Sum + H);
                 sum([], Sum) -> Sum.

                 becomes:

                 sum(L)          -> sum(L, 0).
                 sum([H|T], Sum) -> sum(T, Sum + H);
                 sum([], Sum)    -> Sum.

SYNTAX HIGHLIGHTING

       The syntax highlighting can be activated from the Erlang menu. There are four different alternatives:

         * Off: Normal black and white display.

         * Level  1:  Function headers, reserved words, comments, strings, quoted atoms, and character constants
           will be colored.

         * Level 2: The above, attributes, Erlang bif:s, guards, and words in comments enclosed in single quotes
           will be colored.

         * Level  3: The above, variables, records, and macros will be colored. (This level is also known as the
           Christmas tree level.)

TAGS

       For the tag commands to work it requires that you have generated a tag file. See Erlang mode users guide

         * M-.  (find-tag) - Find a function definition. The default value is the function name under the point.

         * Find Tag (erlang-find-tag) -  Like  the  Elisp-function  `find-tag'.  Capable  of  retrieving  Erlang
           modules. Tags can be given on the forms `tag', `module:', `module:tag'.

         * M-+ (erlang-find-next-tag) - Find the next occurrence of tag.

         * M-TAB (erlang-complete-tag) - Perform completion on the tag entered in a tag search. Completes to the
           set of names listed in the current tags table.

         * Tags aprops (tags-apropos) - Display list of all tags in tags table REGEXP matches.

         * C-x t s (tags-search) - Search through all files listed in tags table for  match  for  REGEXP.  Stops
           when a match is found.

SKELETONS

       A  skeleton is a piece of pre-written code that can be inserted into the buffer. Erlang mode comes with a
       set of predefined skeletons. The skeletons can be accessed either from the Erlang menu of  from  commands
       named tempo-template-erlang-*, as the skeletons is defined using the standard Emacs package "tempo". Here
       follows a brief description of the available skeletons:

         * Simple skeletons: If, Case, Receive, Receive After, Receive Loop - Basic code constructs.

         * Header elements: Module, Author - These  commands  insert  lines  on  the  form  -module(xxx).    and
           -author('my@home')..  They  can  be  used  directly,  but  are  also used as part of the full headers
           described below.

         * Full Headers: Small (minimum requirement), Medium  (with  fields  for  basic  information  about  the
           module), and Large Header (medium header with some extra layout structure).

         * Small Server - skeleton for a simple server not using OTP.

         * Application - skeletons for the OTP application behavior

         * Supervisor - skeleton for the OTP supervisor behavior

         * Supervisor Bridge - skeleton for the OTP supervisor bridge behavior

         * gen_server - skeleton for the OTP gen_server behavior

         * gen_event - skeleton for the OTP gen_event behavior

         * gen_fsm - skeleton for the OTP gen_fsm behavior

         *
            gen_statem (StateName/3) - skeleton for the OTP gen_statem behavior using state name functions

         *
            gen_statem (handle_event/4) - skeleton for the OTP gen_statem behavior using one state function

         * Library module - skeleton for a module that does not implement a process.

         * Corba callback - skeleton for a Corba callback module.

         * Erlang test suite - skeleton for a callback module for the erlang test server.

SHELL

         * New shell (erlang-shell) - Starts a new Erlang shell.

         * C-c C-z, (erlang-shell-display ) - Displays an Erlang shell, or starts a new one if there is no shell
           started.

COMPILE

         * C-c C-k, (erlang-compile) - Compiles the Erlang module in the current buffer. You can also use C-u C-
           c C-k to debug compile the module with the debug options debug_info and export_all.

         * C-c C-l, (erlang-compile-display) - Display compilation output.

         * C-u  C-x`  Start parsing the compiler output from the beginning. This command will place the point on
           the line where the first error was found.

         * C-x` (erlang-next-error) - Move the point on to the next error. The buffer displaying the compilation
           errors will be updated so that the current error will be visible.

MAN

       On  unix you can view the manual pages in emacs. In order to find the manual pages, the variable `erlang-
       root-dir' should be bound to the name of the directory  containing  the  Erlang  installation.  The  name
       should  not  include  the  final  slash. Practically, you should add a line on the following form to your
       ~/.emacs,

             (setq erlang-root-dir "/the/erlang/root/dir/goes/here")

STARTING IMENU

         * M-x imenu-add-to-menubar RET - This command will create the IMenu menu containing all  the  functions
           in  the  current  buffer.The  command will ask you for a suitable name for the menu. Not supported by
           Xemacs.

VERSION

         * M-x erlang-version RET - This command displays  the  version  number  of  the  Erlang  editing  mode.
           Remember to always supply the version number when asking questions about the Erlang mode.