Difference between revisions of "C-mode"
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== Change default indenting style == | == Change default indenting style == | ||
− | + | == Style == | |
Any mode based on {{ModeLink|cc-mode}} provides automatic indentation. The default style is <code>gnu</code>. It is the one recommended by the Free Software Foundation for GNU projects but you can use a different one. | Any mode based on {{ModeLink|cc-mode}} provides automatic indentation. The default style is <code>gnu</code>. It is the one recommended by the Free Software Foundation for GNU projects but you can use a different one. | ||
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For visual example of each style you can look the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indent_style Wikipedia article on indenting style]. | For visual example of each style you can look the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indent_style Wikipedia article on indenting style]. | ||
− | * The default style is set via the variable {{ | + | * The default style is set via the variable {{Variable|c-default-style}} |
− | * Use {{ | + | * Use {{CommandKeys|C-c .|c-set-style}} to change the indentation style of the current buffer. |
− | * The amount of space use to indent is set via the variable {{ | + | * The amount of space use to indent is set via the variable {{Variable|c-basic-offset}}. |
To set the default style to K&R and use 4 spaces, add this to your {{EmacsConfigFile}}: | To set the default style to K&R and use 4 spaces, add this to your {{EmacsConfigFile}}: |
Revision as of 12:26, 31 March 2012
c-mode is the default major mode for editing C source files (.c and .h files). It uses cc-mode.
Basic setup
c-mode is bundled with Emacs by default. No additional setup is required.
Helpful keybindings
- [C-M-a]
- Go to the beginning of the current function. If you are between 2 functions, go the start of the previous one.
- [C-M-e]
- Go to the end of the current function. If you are between 2 functions, go to the end of the next one.
Common Customization
Change default indenting style
Style
Any mode based on cc-mode provides automatic indentation. The default style is gnu
. It is the one recommended by the Free Software Foundation for GNU projects but you can use a different one.
Here is a basic list of predefined styles:
gnu
- The default style for GNU projects
k&r
- What Kernighan and Ritchie, the authors of C used in their book
bsd
- What BSD developers use, aka “Allman style” after Eric Allman.
whitesmith
- Popularized by the examples that came with Whitesmiths C, an early commercial C compiler.
stroustrup
- What Stroustrup, the author of C++ used in his book
ellemtel
- Popular C++ coding standards as defined by “Programming in C++, Rules and Recommendations,” Erik Nyquist and Mats Henricson, Ellemtel
linux
- What the Linux developers use for kernel development
python
- What Python developers use for extension modules
java
- The default style for java-mode (see below)
user
- When you want to define your own style
You can look the cc-mode documentation for a complete list of builtin style. For visual example of each style you can look the Wikipedia article on indenting style.
- The default style is set via the variable c-default-style
- Use [C-c .] (or M-x c-set-style) to change the indentation style of the current buffer.
- The amount of space use to indent is set via the variable c-basic-offset.
To set the default style to K&R and use 4 spaces, add this to your Emacs configuration file:
; set k&r style
(setq c-default-style "k&r")
; indent with 4 spaces
(setq c-basic-offset 4)
GNU/Linux
OS X
Windows
Emacs-24
Emacs-23
Recommended Reading
Project Pages