Minor modes are optional features which you can turn on or off. For
example, Auto Fill mode is a minor mode in which SPC
breaks lines
between words as you type. All the minor modes are independent of each
other and of the selected major mode. Most minor modes say in the mode
line when they are on; for example, `Fill
' in the mode line means
that Auto Fill mode is on.
Append -mode
to the name of a minor mode to get the name of a
command function that turns the mode on or off. Thus, the command to
enable or disable Auto Fill mode is called M-x auto-fill-mode. These
commands are usually invoked with M-x, but you can bind keys to them
if you wish. With no argument, the function turns the mode on if it was
off and off if it was on. This is known as toggling. A positive
argument always turns the mode on, and an explicit zero argument or a
negative argument always turns it off.
Enabling or disabling some minor modes applies only to the current buffer; each buffer is independent of the other buffers. Therefore, you can enable the mode in particular buffers and disable it in others. The per-buffer minor modes include Abbrev mode, Auto Fill mode, Auto Save mode, Font-Lock mode, Hscroll mode, ISO Accents mode, Outline minor mode, Overwrite mode, and Binary Overwrite mode.
Abbrev mode allows you to define abbreviations that automatically expand
as you type them. For example, `amd
' might expand to `abbrev mode
'. See Abbrevs, for full information.
Auto Fill mode allows you to enter filled text without breaking lines explicitly. Emacs inserts newlines as necessary to prevent lines from becoming too long. See Filling.
Auto Save mode causes the contents of a buffer to be saved periodically to reduce the amount of work you can lose in case of a system crash. See Auto Save.
Enriched mode enables editing and saving of formatted text. See Formatted Text.
Flyspell mode automatically highlights misspelled words. See Spelling.
Font-Lock mode automatically highlights certain textual units found in programs, such as comments, strings, and function names being defined. This requires a window system that can display multiple fonts. See Faces.
Hscroll mode performs horizontal scrolling automatically to keep point on the screen. See Horizontal Scrolling.
ISO Accents mode makes the characters ``
', `'
', `"
',
`^
', `/
' and `~
' combine with the following letter, to
produce an accented letter in the ISO Latin-1 character set.
See Single-Byte European Support.
Outline minor mode provides the same facilities as the major mode called Outline mode; but since it is a minor mode instead, you can combine it with any major mode. See Outline Mode.
Overwrite mode causes ordinary printing characters to replace existing
text instead of shoving it to the right. For example, if point is in
front of the `B
' in `FOOBAR
', then in Overwrite mode typing a
G changes it to `FOOGAR
', instead of producing `FOOGBAR
'
as usual. In Overwrite mode, the command C-q inserts the next
character whatever it may be, even if it is a digit---this gives you a
way to insert a character instead of replacing an existing character.
Binary Overwrite mode is a variant of Overwrite mode for editing binary files; it treats newlines and tabs like other characters, so that they overwrite other characters and can be overwritten by them.
The following minor modes normally apply to all buffers at once. Since each is enabled or disabled by the value of a variable, you can set them differently for particular buffers, by explicitly making the corresponding variables local in those buffers. See Locals.
Icomplete mode displays an indication of available completions when you are in the minibuffer and completion is active. See Completion Options.
Line Number mode enables continuous display in the mode line of the line number of point. See Mode Line.
Resize-Minibuffer mode makes the minibuffer expand as necessary to hold the text that you put in it. See Minibuffer Edit.
Scroll Bar mode gives each window a scroll bar (see Scroll Bars). Menu Bar mode gives each frame a menu bar (see Menu Bars). Both of these modes are enabled by default when you use the X Window System.
In Transient Mark mode, every change in the buffer contents ``deactivates'' the mark, so that commands that operate on the region will get an error. This means you must either set the mark, or explicitly ``reactivate'' it, before each command that uses the region. The advantage of Transient Mark mode is that Emacs can display the region highlighted (currently only when using X). See Setting Mark.
For most minor modes, the command name is also the name of a variable
which directly controls the mode. The mode is enabled whenever this
variable's value is non-nil
, and the minor-mode command works by
setting the variable. For example, the command
outline-minor-mode
works by setting the value of
outline-minor-mode
as a variable; it is this variable that
directly turns Outline minor mode on and off. To check whether a given
minor mode works this way, use C-h v to ask for documentation on
the variable name.
These minor-mode variables provide a good way for Lisp programs to turn minor modes on and off; they are also useful in a file's local variables list. But please think twice before setting minor modes with a local variables list, because most minor modes are matter of user preference---other users editing the same file might not want the same minor modes you prefer.
Customization Variables