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A symbol search is much like an ordinary search,
except that the boundaries of the search must match the
boundaries of a symbol. The meaning of symbol in this
context depends on the major mode, and usually refers to a source
code token, such as a Lisp symbol in Emacs Lisp mode. For
instance, if you perform an incremental symbol search for the
Lisp symbol forward-word, it would not match
isearch-forward-word. This feature is thus mainly
useful for searching source code.
If incremental search is active, toggle symbol search mode
(isearch-toggle-symbol); otherwise, begin an
incremental forward symbol search
(isearch-forward-symbol).
Start a symbol incremental search forward with the symbol found near point added to the search string initially.
Search forward for symbol, nonincrementally.
Search backward for symbol, nonincrementally.
To begin a forward incremental symbol search, type M-s
_ (or M-s . if the symbol to search is near
point). If incremental search is not already active, this runs
the command isearch-forward-symbol. If incremental
search is already active, M-s _ switches to a symbol
search, preserving the direction of the search and the current
search string; you can disable symbol search by typing M-s
_ again. In incremental symbol search, only the beginning
of the search string is required to match the beginning of a
symbol.
To begin a nonincremental symbol search, type M-s _ RET for a forward search, or M-s _ C-r RET or a backward search. In nonincremental symbol searches, the beginning and end of the search string are required to match the beginning and end of a symbol, respectively.
The symbol search commands don’t perform character folding, and toggling lax whitespace matching (see lax space matching) has no effect on them.
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