This section describes some variables that hold regular expressions used for certain purposes in editing:
"^\014"
(i.e., "^^L"
or
"^\C-l"
); this matches a line that starts with a formfeed
character.
The following two regular expressions should not assume the match always starts at the beginning of a line; they should not use `^' to anchor the match. Most often, the paragraph commands do check for a match only at the beginning of a line, which means that `^' would be superfluous. When there is a nonzero left margin, they accept matches that start after the left margin. In that case, a `^' would be incorrect. However, a `^' is harmless in modes where a left margin is never used.
paragraph-start
also.) The default value is
"[ \t\f]*$"
, which matches a line that consists entirely of
spaces, tabs, and form feeds (after its left margin).
"[ \t\n\f]"
, which matches a line starting with a space, tab,
newline, or form feed (after its left margin).
"[.?!][]\"')}]*\\($\\| $\\|\t\\| \\)[ \t\n]*"
This means a period, question mark or exclamation mark, followed optionally by a closing parenthetical character, followed by tabs, spaces or new lines.
For a detailed explanation of this regular expression, see section Complex Regexp Example.
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