Go to the first, previous, next, last section, table of contents.
You can select a major mode explicitly for the current buffer, but most of the time Emacs determines which mode to use based on the file name or on special text in the file.
Explicit selection of a new major mode is done with a M-x command.
From the name of a major mode, add -mode
to get the name of a
command to select that mode. Thus, you can enter Lisp mode by executing
M-x lisp-mode.
When you visit a file, Emacs usually chooses the right major mode based
on the file's name. For example, files whose names end in `.c' are
edited in C mode. The correspondence between file names and major modes is
controlled by the variable auto-mode-alist
. Its value is a list in
which each element has this form,
(regexp . mode-function)
or this form,
(regexp mode-function flag)
For example, one element normally found in the list has the form
("\\.c\\'" . c-mode)
, and it is responsible for selecting C
mode for files whose names end in `.c'. (Note that `\\' is
needed in Lisp syntax to include a `\' in the string, which is
needed to suppress the special meaning of `.' in regexps.) If the
element has the form (regexp mode-function
flag)
and flag is non-nil
, then after calling
function, the suffix that matched regexp is discarded and
the list is searched again for another match.
You can specify which major mode should be used for editing a certain file by a special sort of text in the first nonblank line of the file. The mode name should appear in this line both preceded and followed by `-*-'. Other text may appear on the line as well. For example,
;-*-Lisp-*-
tells Emacs to use Lisp mode. Such an explicit specification overrides any defaulting based on the file name. Note how the semicolon is used to make Lisp treat this line as a comment.
Another format of mode specification is
-*- mode: modename;-*-
which allows you to specify local variables as well, like this:
-*- mode: modename; var: value; ... -*-
See section Local Variables in Files, for more information about this.
When a file's contents begin with `#!', it can serve as an executable shell command, which works by running an interpreter named on the file's first line. The rest of the file is used as input to the interpreter.
When you visit such a file in Emacs, if the file's name does not
specify a major mode, Emacs uses the interpreter name on the first line
to choose a mode. If the first line is the name of a recognized
interpreter program, such as `perl' or `tcl', Emacs uses a
mode appropriate for programs for that interpreter. The variable
interpreter-mode-alist
specifies the correspondence between
interpreter program names and major modes.
When the first line starts with `#!', you cannot (on many systems) use the `-*-' feature on the first line, because the system would get confused when running the interpreter. So Emacs looks for `-*-' on the second line in such files as well as on the first line.
When you visit a file that does not specify a major mode to use, or
when you create a new buffer with C-x b, the variable
default-major-mode
specifies which major mode to use. Normally
its value is the symbol fundamental-mode
, which specifies
Fundamental mode. If default-major-mode
is nil
, the major
mode is taken from the previously selected buffer.
If you change the major mode of a buffer, you can go back to the major
mode Emacs would choose automatically: use the command M-x
normal-mode to do this. This is the same function that
find-file
calls to choose the major mode. It also processes
the file's local variables list if any.
The commands C-x C-w and set-visited-file-name
change to
a new major mode if the new file name implies a mode (see section Saving Files).
However, this does not happen if the buffer contents specify a major
mode, and certain "special" major modes do not allow the mode to
change. You can turn off this mode-changing feature by setting
change-major-mode-with-file-name
to nil
.
Go to the first, previous, next, last section, table of contents.