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The major modes for SGML and HTML provide indentation support and commands for operating on tags. HTML mode is a slightly customized variant of SGML mode.
Interactively specify a special character and insert the
SGML ‘&’-command for that
character (sgml-name-char).
Interactively specify a tag and its attributes
(sgml-tag). This command asks you for a tag name
and for the attribute values, then inserts both the opening
tag and the closing tag, leaving point between them.
With a prefix argument n, the command puts the tag around the n words already present in the buffer after point. Whenever a region is active, it puts the tag around the region (when Transient Mark mode is off, it does this when a numeric argument of −1 is supplied.)
Interactively insert attribute values for the current tag
(sgml-attributes).
Skip across a balanced tag group (which extends from an
opening tag through its corresponding closing tag)
(sgml-skip-tag-forward). A numeric argument acts
as a repeat count.
Skip backward across a balanced tag group (which extends
from an opening tag through its corresponding closing tag)
(sgml-skip-tag-backward). A numeric argument
acts as a repeat count.
Delete the tag at or after point, and delete the matching
tag too (sgml-delete-tag). If the tag at or
after point is an opening tag, delete the closing tag too; if
it is a closing tag, delete the opening tag too.
Display a description of the meaning of tag tag
(sgml-tag-help). If the argument tag
is empty, describe the tag at point.
Insert a close tag for the innermost unterminated tag
(sgml-close-tag). If called within a tag or a
comment, close it instead of inserting a close tag.
Toggle a minor mode in which Latin-1 characters insert the
corresponding SGML commands that stand for them, instead of
the characters themselves
(sgml-name-8bit-mode).
Run a shell command (which you must specify) to validate
the current buffer as SGML (sgml-validate).
Toggle the visibility of existing tags in the buffer. This
can be used as a cheap preview
(sgml-tags-invisible).
The major mode for editing XML documents is called nXML mode.
This is a powerful major mode that can recognize many existing
XML schema and use them to provide completion of XML elements via
M-TAB, as well as on-the-fly
XML validation with error highlighting. To enable nXML mode in an
existing buffer, type M-x nxml-mode, or, equivalently,
M-x xml-mode. Emacs uses nXML mode for files which
have the extension .xml. For XHTML files, which have
the extension .xhtml, Emacs uses HTML mode by
default; you can make it use nXML mode by customizing the
variable auto-mode-alist (see Choosing Modes). nXML
mode is described in an Info manual, which is distributed with
Emacs.
You may choose to use the less powerful SGML mode for editing
XML, since XML is a strict subset of SGML. To enable SGML mode in
an existing buffer, type M-x sgml-mode. On enabling
SGML mode, Emacs examines the buffer to determine whether it is
XML; if so, it sets the variable sgml-xml-mode to a
non-nil value. This causes SGML mode’s tag
insertion commands, described above, to always insert explicit
closing tags as well.
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