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This section describes the primitive functions used to count and insert indentation. The functions in the following sections use these primitives. See Size of Displayed Text, for related functions.
This function returns the indentation of the current line, which is the horizontal position of the first nonblank character. If the contents are entirely blank, then this is the horizontal position of the end of the line.
This function indents from point with tabs and spaces
until column is reached. If minimum is
specified and non-nil, then at least that many
spaces are inserted even if this requires going beyond
column. Otherwise the function does nothing if
point is already beyond column. The value is the
column at which the inserted indentation ends.
The inserted whitespace characters inherit text properties from the surrounding text (usually, from the preceding text only). See Sticky Properties.
If this variable is non-nil, indentation
functions can insert tabs as well as spaces. Otherwise, they
insert only spaces. Setting this variable automatically makes
it buffer-local in the current buffer.