Difference between revisions of "Subword-mode"
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(added a basic page on subword-mode) |
(→See Also: string-inflection package, to toggle name styles) |
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* [[CamelCase]] | * [[CamelCase]] | ||
+ | * [http://melpa.milkbox.net/#/string-inflection String-inflection], a [[Melpa]] package that permits to toggle between the underscore, UPPERCASE and CamelCase name styles. | ||
[[Category:Programming]][[Category:Convenience]][[Category:Built-in Package]] | [[Category:Programming]][[Category:Convenience]][[Category:Built-in Package]] |
Latest revision as of 09:04, 6 May 2014
Subword-mode is a buffer-local minor mode. Enabling it remaps word-based editing commands to subword-based commands that handle symbols with mixed uppercase and lowercase letters, e.g. "GtkWidget", "EmacsFrameClass", "NSGraphicsContext".
Here we call these mixed case symbols `nomenclatures'. Each capitalized (or completely uppercase) part of a nomenclature is called a `subword'. Here are some examples:
Nomenclature Subwords =========================================================== GtkWindow => "Gtk" and "Window" EmacsFrameClass => "Emacs", "Frame" and "Class" NSGraphicsContext => "NS", "Graphics" and "Context"
The subword oriented commands activated in this minor mode recognize subwords in a nomenclature to move between subwords and to edit them as words.
Basic setup
(subword-mode +1)
Helpful keybindings
Subword-mode remaps common navigational commands to similar subword commands that are CamelCase aware.
<backward-kill-word> | subword-backward-kill |
<backward-word> | subword-backward |
<capitalize-word> | subword-capitalize |
<downcase-word> | subword-downcase |
<forward-word> | subword-forward |
<kill-word> | subword-kill |
<mark-word> | subword-mark |
<transpose-words> | subword-transpose |
<upcase-word> | subword-upcase |
See Also
- CamelCase
- String-inflection, a Melpa package that permits to toggle between the underscore, UPPERCASE and CamelCase name styles.