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Two kinds of tab-like action are provided in Picture mode. Use
M-TAB
(picture-tab-search) for context-based tabbing. With
no argument, it moves to a point underneath the next
“interesting” character that follows whitespace in
the previous nonblank line. “Next” here means
“appearing at a horizontal position greater than the one
point starts out at”. With an argument, as in C-u
M-TAB, this command moves to the
next such interesting character in the current line.
M-TAB does not change the
text; it only moves point. “Interesting” characters
are defined by the variable picture-tab-chars, which
should define a set of characters. The syntax for this variable
is like the syntax used inside of
‘[…]’ in a regular
expression—but without the ‘[’ and
the ‘]’. Its default value is
"!-~".
TAB itself runs picture-tab,
which operates based on the current tab stop settings; it is the
Picture mode equivalent of tab-to-tab-stop. Normally
it just moves point, but with a numeric argument it clears the
text that it moves over.
The context-based and tab-stop-based forms of tabbing are
brought together by the command C-c TAB (picture-set-tab-stops). This
command sets the tab stops to the positions which
M-TAB would consider
significant in the current line. The use of this command,
together with TAB, can get the effect of
context-based tabbing. But M-TAB is more convenient in the cases where it
is sufficient.
It may be convenient to prevent use of actual tab characters
in pictures. For example, this prevents C-x TAB from messing up the picture. You can do
this by setting the variable indent-tabs-mode to
nil.
Next: Rectangles in Picture, Previous: Insert in Picture, Up: Picture Mode [Contents][Index]