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Here we describe the functions for creating keymaps.
- Function: make-keymap &optional prompt
-
This function creates and returns a new full keymap (i.e., one
containing a vector of length 128 for defining all the ASCII
characters). The new keymap initially binds all ASCII characters
to
nil
, and does not bind any other kind of event.
(make-keymap)
=> (keymap [nil nil nil ... nil nil])
If you specify prompt, that becomes the overall prompt string for
the keymap. The prompt string is useful for menu keymaps (see section Menu Keymaps).
- Function: make-sparse-keymap &optional prompt
-
This function creates and returns a new sparse keymap with no entries.
The new keymap does not bind any events. The argument prompt
specifies a prompt string, as in
make-keymap
.
(make-sparse-keymap)
=> (keymap)
- Function: copy-keymap keymap
-
This function returns a copy of keymap. Any keymaps that
appear directly as bindings in keymap are also copied recursively,
and so on to any number of levels. However, recursive copying does not
take place when the definition of a character is a symbol whose function
definition is a keymap; the same symbol appears in the new copy.
(setq map (copy-keymap (current-local-map)))
=> (keymap
;; (This implements meta characters.)
(27 keymap
(83 . center-paragraph)
(115 . center-line))
(9 . tab-to-tab-stop))
(eq map (current-local-map))
=> nil
(equal map (current-local-map))
=> t
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