Defining Derived Modes
The recommended way to define a new major mode is to derive it from an existing one using define-derived-mode
. If there is no closely related mode, you should inherit from either text-mode
, special-mode
, or prog-mode
. See Basic Major Modes. If none of these are suitable, you can inherit from fundamental-mode
(see Major Modes).
- Macro: define-derived-mode variant parent name docstring keyword-args… body…
-
This macro defines variant as a major mode command, using name as the string form of the mode name. variant and parent should be unquoted symbols.
The new command variant is defined to call the function parent, then override certain aspects of that parent mode:
- The new mode has its own sparse keymap, named
variant-map
.define-derived-mode
makes the parent mode’s keymap the parent of the new map, unlessvariant-map
is already set and already has a parent. - The new mode has its own syntax table, kept in the variable
variant-syntax-table
, unless you override this using the:syntax-table
keyword (see below).define-derived-mode
makes the parent mode’s syntax-table the parent ofvariant-syntax-table
, unless the latter is already set and already has a parent different from the standard syntax table. - The new mode has its own abbrev table, kept in the variable
variant-abbrev-table
, unless you override this using the:abbrev-table
keyword (see below). - The new mode has its own mode hook,
variant-hook
. It runs this hook, after running the hooks of its ancestor modes, withrun-mode-hooks
, as the last thing it does, apart from running any:after-hook
form it may have. See Mode Hooks.
In addition, you can specify how to override other aspects of parent with body. The command variant evaluates the forms in body after setting up all its usual overrides, just before running the mode hooks.
If parent has a non-
nil
mode-class
symbol property, thendefine-derived-mode
sets themode-class
property of variant to the same value. This ensures, for example, that if parent is a special mode, then variant is also a special mode (see Major Mode Conventions).You can also specify
nil
for parent. This gives the new mode no parent. Thendefine-derived-mode
behaves as described above, but, of course, omits all actions connected with parent.The argument docstring specifies the documentation string for the new mode.
define-derived-mode
adds some general information about the mode’s hook, followed by the mode’s keymap, at the end of this documentation string. If you omit docstring,define-derived-mode
generates a documentation string.The keyword-args are pairs of keywords and values. The values, except for
:after-hook
’s, are evaluated. The following keywords are currently supported::syntax-table
-
You can use this to explicitly specify a syntax table for the new mode. If you specify a
nil
value, the new mode uses the same syntax table as parent, or the standard syntax table if parent isnil
. (Note that this does not follow the convention used for non-keyword arguments that anil
value is equivalent with not specifying the argument.) :abbrev-table
-
You can use this to explicitly specify an abbrev table for the new mode. If you specify a
nil
value, the new mode uses the same abbrev table as parent, orfundamental-mode-abbrev-table
if parent isnil
. (Again, anil
value is not equivalent to not specifying this keyword.) :group
-
If this is specified, the value should be the customization group for this mode. (Not all major modes have one.) The command
customize-mode
uses this.define-derived-mode
does not automatically define the specified customization group. :after-hook
This optional keyword specifies a single Lisp form to evaluate as the final act of the mode function, after the mode hooks have been run. It should not be quoted. Since the form might be evaluated after the mode function has terminated, it should not access any element of the mode function’s local state. An
:after-hook
form is useful for setting up aspects of the mode which depend on the user’s settings, which in turn may have been changed in a mode hook.
Here is a hypothetical example:
(defvar hypertext-mode-map (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap))) (define-key map [down-mouse-3] 'do-hyper-link) map)) (define-derived-mode hypertext-mode text-mode "Hypertext" "Major mode for hypertext." (setq-local case-fold-search nil))
Do not write an
interactive
spec in the definition;define-derived-mode
does that automatically. - The new mode has its own sparse keymap, named
- Function: derived-mode-p &rest modes
This function returns non-
nil
if the current major mode is derived from any of the major modes given by the symbols modes.
Copyright © 1990-1996, 1998-2021 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Licensed under the GNU GPL license.
https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/elisp/Derived-Modes.html