Most punctuation keys provide electric behavior -
as well as inserting themselves they perform some other action,
such as reindenting the line. This reindentation saves you from
having to reindent a line manually after typing, say, a
‘}’. A few
keywords, such as else, also trigger electric
action.
You can inhibit the electric behavior described here by disabling electric minor mode (see Minor Modes).
Common to all these keys is that they only behave electrically
when used in normal code (as contrasted with getting typed in a
string literal or comment). Those which cause re-indentation do
so only when c-syntactic-indentation has a
non-nil value (which it does by default).
These keys and keywords are:
c-electric-pound) is electric when
typed as the first non-whitespace character on a line and not
within a macro definition. In this case, the variable
c-electric-pound-behavior is consulted for the
electric behavior. This variable takes a list value, although
the only element currently defined is alignleft,
which tells this command to force the
‘#’
character into column zero. This is useful for entering
preprocessor macro definitions.
Pound is not electric in AWK buffers, where
‘#’ starts
a comment, and is bound to self-insert-command
like any typical printable character.
c-electric-star) or a slash
(c-electric-slash) causes reindentation when you
type it as the second component of a C style block comment
opener (‘/*’) or a C++ line comment opener
(‘//’)
respectively, but only if the comment opener is the first
thing on the line (i.e. there's only whitespace before it).
Additionally, you can configure CC Mode so that typing a slash at the start of a line within a block comment will terminate the comment. You don't need to have electric minor mode enabled to get this behavior. See Clean-ups.
In AWK mode, ‘*’ and ‘/’ do not delimit comments and are
not electric.
c-electric-lt-gt) is electric in two
circumstances: when it is an angle bracket in a C++
‘template’
declaration (and similar constructs in other languages) and
when it is the second of two < or >
characters in a C++ style stream operator. In either case, the
line is reindented. Angle brackets in C
‘#include’
directives are not electric.c-electric-paren) reindent the current line.
This is useful for getting the closing parenthesis of an
argument list aligned automatically.
You can also configure CC Mode to insert a space
automatically between a function name and the
‘(’ you've
just typed, and to remove it automatically after typing
‘)’,
should the argument list be empty. You don't need to have
electric minor mode enabled to get these actions. See
Clean-ups.
c-electric-brace) reindents the
current line. Also, one or more newlines might be inserted if
auto-newline minor mode is enabled. See Auto-newlines.
Additionally, you can configure CC Mode to compact excess
whitespace inserted by auto-newline mode in certain
circumstances. See Clean-ups.c-electric-colon) reindents the
current line. Additionally, one or more newlines might be
inserted if auto-newline minor mode is enabled. See Auto-newlines.
If you type a second colon immediately after such an
auto-newline, by default the whitespace between the two
colons is removed, leaving a C++ scope operator. See Clean-ups.
If you prefer, you can insert ‘::’ in a single operation,
avoiding all these spurious reindentations, newlines, and
clean-ups. See Other
Commands.
c-electric-semi&comma) reindents the current
line. Also, a newline might be inserted if auto-newline minor
mode is enabled. See Auto-newlines.
Additionally, you can configure CC Mode so that when
auto-newline has inserted whitespace after a
‘}’, it will
be removed again when you type a semicolon or comma just after
it. See Clean-ups.Certain keywords are electric, causing reindentation when they are preceded only by whitespace on the line. The keywords are those that continue an earlier statement instead of starting a new one:
else,while,catch(only in C++ and Java) andfinally(only in Java).An example:
for (i = 0; i < 17; i++) if (a[i]) res += a[i]->offset; elseHere, the
elseshould be indented like the precedingif, since it continues that statement. CC Mode will automatically reindent it after theelsehas been typed in full, since only then is it possible to decide whether it's a new statement or a continuation of the precedingif.CC Mode uses Abbrev mode (see Abbrevs) to accomplish this. It's therefore turned on by default in all language modes except IDL mode, since CORBA IDL doesn't have any statements.