Previous: Tags Tables, Up: Xref [Contents][Index]
Emacs has at any time at most one selected tags table. All the commands for working with tags tables use the selected one. To select a tags table, type M-x visit-tags-table, which reads the tags table file name as an argument, with TAGS in the default directory as the default.
Emacs does not actually read in the tags table contents until
you try to use them; all visit-tags-table does is
store the file name in the variable tags-file-name,
and setting the variable yourself is just as good. The
variable’s initial value is nil; that value
tells all the commands for working with tags tables that they
must ask for a tags table file name to use.
Using visit-tags-table when a tags table is
already loaded gives you a choice: you can add the new tags table
to the current list of tags tables, or start a new list. The tags
commands use all the tags tables in the current list. If you
start a new list, the new tags table is used instead of
others. If you add the new table to the current list, it is used
as well as the others.
You can specify a precise list of tags tables by setting the
variable tags-table-list to a list of strings, like
this:
(setq tags-table-list
'("~/emacs" "/usr/local/lib/emacs/src"))
This tells the tags commands to look at the TAGS files in your ~/emacs directory and in the /usr/local/lib/emacs/src directory. The order depends on which file you are in and which tags table mentions that file, as explained above.
Do not set both tags-file-name and
tags-table-list.
Previous: Tags Tables, Up: Xref [Contents][Index]