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Start defining a keyboard macro
(kmacro-start-macro-or-insert-counter).
If a keyboard macro is being defined, end the definition;
otherwise, execute the most recent keyboard macro
(kmacro-end-or-call-macro).
Re-execute last keyboard macro, then append keys to its definition.
Append keys to the last keyboard macro without re-executing it.
Run the last keyboard macro on each line that begins in
the region (apply-macro-to-region-lines).
To start defining a keyboard macro, type F3. From then on, your keys continue to be executed,
but also become part of the definition of the macro.
‘Def’ appears in the mode line to remind
you of what is going on. When you are finished, type F4 (kmacro-end-or-call-macro) to
terminate the definition. For example,
F3 M-f foo F4
defines a macro to move forward a word and then insert ‘foo’. Note that F3 and F4 do not become part of the macro.
After defining the macro, you can call it with F4. For the above example, this has the same effect as typing M-f foo again. (Note the two roles of the F4 command: it ends the macro if you are in the process of defining one, or calls the last macro otherwise.) You can also supply F4 with a numeric prefix argument ‘n’, which means to invoke the macro ‘n’ times. An argument of zero repeats the macro indefinitely, until it gets an error or you type C-g (or, on MS-DOS, C-BREAK).
The above example demonstrates a handy trick that you can employ with keyboard macros: if you wish to repeat an operation at regularly spaced places in the text, include a motion command as part of the macro. In this case, repeating the macro inserts the string ‘foo’ after each successive word.
After terminating the definition of a keyboard macro, you can
append more keystrokes to its definition by typing C-u
F3. This is equivalent to plain
F3 followed by retyping the whole definition
so far. As a consequence, it re-executes the macro as previously
defined. If you change the variable
kmacro-execute-before-append to nil,
the existing macro will not be re-executed before appending to it
(the default is t). You can also add to the end of
the definition of the last keyboard macro without re-executing it
by typing C-u C-u F3.
When a command reads an argument with the minibuffer, your minibuffer input becomes part of the macro along with the command. So when you replay the macro, the command gets the same argument as when you entered the macro. For example,
F3 C-a C-k C-x b foo RET C-y C-x b RET F4
defines a macro that kills the current line, yanks it into the buffer ‘foo’, then returns to the original buffer.
Most keyboard commands work as usual in a keyboard macro
definition, with some exceptions. Typing C-g
(keyboard-quit) quits the keyboard macro definition.
Typing C-M-c (exit-recursive-edit) can be
unreliable: it works as you’d expect if exiting a recursive
edit that started within the macro, but if it exits a recursive
edit that started before you invoked the keyboard macro, it also
necessarily exits the keyboard macro too. Mouse events are also
unreliable, even though you can use them in a keyboard macro:
when the macro replays the mouse event, it uses the original
mouse position of that event, the position that the mouse had
while you were defining the macro. The effect of this may be hard
to predict.
The command C-x C-k r
(apply-macro-to-region-lines) repeats the last
defined keyboard macro on each line that begins in the region. It
does this line by line, by moving point to the beginning of the
line and then executing the macro.
In addition to the F3 and F4 commands described above, Emacs also supports an
older set of key bindings for defining and executing keyboard
macros. To begin a macro definition, type C-x (
(kmacro-start-macro); as with F3, a prefix argument appends this definition to the
last keyboard macro. To end a macro definition, type C-x
) (kmacro-end-macro). To execute the most
recent macro, type C-x e
(kmacro-end-and-call-macro). If you enter C-x
e while defining a macro, the macro is terminated and
executed immediately. Immediately after typing C-x e,
you can type e repeatedly to immediately
repeat the macro one or more times. You can also give C-x
e a repeat argument, just like F4.
C-x ) can be given a repeat count as an argument. This means to repeat the macro right after defining it. The macro definition itself counts as the first repetition, since it is executed as you define it, so C-u 4 C-x ) executes the macro immediately 3 additional times.
Next: Keyboard Macro Ring, Up: Keyboard Macros [Contents][Index]