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A keyboard macro is a canned sequence of input events that can be considered a command and made the definition of a key. The Lisp representation of a keyboard macro is a string or vector containing the events. Don’t confuse keyboard macros with Lisp macros (see Macros).
This function executes kbdmacro as a sequence of events. If kbdmacro is a string or vector, then the events in it are executed exactly as if they had been input by the user. The sequence is not expected to be a single key sequence; normally a keyboard macro definition consists of several key sequences concatenated.
If kbdmacro is a symbol, then its function definition is used in place of kbdmacro. If that is another symbol, this process repeats. Eventually the result should be a string or vector. If the result is not a symbol, string, or vector, an error is signaled.
The argument count is a repeat count; kbdmacro is executed that
many times. If count is omitted or nil
, kbdmacro is
executed once. If it is 0, kbdmacro is executed over and over until it
encounters an error or a failing search.
If loopfunc is non-nil
, it is a function that is called,
without arguments, prior to each iteration of the macro. If
loopfunc returns nil
, then this stops execution of the macro.
See Reading One Event, for an example of using execute-kbd-macro
.
This variable contains the string or vector that defines the keyboard
macro that is currently executing. It is nil
if no macro is
currently executing. A command can test this variable so as to behave
differently when run from an executing macro. Do not set this variable
yourself.
This variable is non-nil
if and only if a keyboard macro is
being defined. A command can test this variable so as to behave
differently while a macro is being defined. The value is
append
while appending to the definition of an existing macro.
The commands start-kbd-macro
, kmacro-start-macro
and
end-kbd-macro
set this variable—do not set it yourself.
The variable is always local to the current terminal and cannot be buffer-local. See Multiple Terminals.
This variable is the definition of the most recently defined keyboard
macro. Its value is a string or vector, or nil
.
The variable is always local to the current terminal and cannot be buffer-local. See Multiple Terminals.
This normal hook is run when a keyboard macro terminates, regardless of what caused it to terminate (reaching the macro end or an error which ended the macro prematurely).
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