Next: List Motion, Previous: Text Lines, Up: Motion [Contents][Index]
The line functions in the previous section count text lines, delimited only by newline characters. By contrast, these functions count screen lines, which are defined by the way the text appears on the screen. A text line is a single screen line if it is short enough to fit the width of the selected window, but otherwise it may occupy several screen lines.
In some cases, text lines are truncated on the screen rather than
continued onto additional screen lines. In these cases,
vertical-motion
moves point much like forward-line
.
See Truncation.
Because the width of a given string depends on the flags that control
the appearance of certain characters, vertical-motion
behaves
differently, for a given piece of text, depending on the buffer it is
in, and even on the selected window (because the width, the truncation
flag, and display table may vary between windows). See Usual Display.
These functions scan text to determine where screen lines break, and thus take time proportional to the distance scanned.
This function moves point to the start of the screen line count screen lines down from the screen line containing point. If count is negative, it moves up instead.
The count argument can be a cons cell, (cols
. lines)
, instead of an integer. Then the function moves by
lines screen lines, and puts point cols columns from the
visual start of that screen line. Note that cols are counted
from the visual start of the line; if the window is scrolled
horizontally (see Horizontal Scrolling), the column on which point
will end is in addition to the number of columns by which the text is
scrolled.
The return value is the number of screen lines over which point was moved. The value may be less in absolute value than count if the beginning or end of the buffer was reached.
The window window is used for obtaining parameters such as the
width, the horizontal scrolling, and the display table. But
vertical-motion
always operates on the current buffer, even if
window currently displays some other buffer.
This function returns the number of screen lines in the text from
beg to end. The number of screen lines may be different
from the number of actual lines, due to line continuation, the display
table, etc. If beg and end are nil
or omitted,
they default to the beginning and end of the accessible portion of the
buffer.
If the region ends with a newline, that is ignored unless the optional
third argument count-final-newline is non-nil
.
The optional fourth argument window specifies the window for obtaining parameters such as width, horizontal scrolling, and so on. The default is to use the selected window’s parameters.
Like vertical-motion
, count-screen-lines
always uses the
current buffer, regardless of which buffer is displayed in
window. This makes possible to use count-screen-lines
in
any buffer, whether or not it is currently displayed in some window.
This function moves point with respect to the text currently displayed in the selected window. It moves point to the beginning of the screen line count screen lines from the top of the window. If count is negative, that specifies a position -count lines from the bottom (or the last line of the buffer, if the buffer ends above the specified screen position).
If count is nil
, then point moves to the beginning of the
line in the middle of the window. If the absolute value of count
is greater than the size of the window, then point moves to the place
that would appear on that screen line if the window were tall enough.
This will probably cause the next redisplay to scroll to bring that
location onto the screen.
In an interactive call, count is the numeric prefix argument.
The value returned is the window line number point has moved to, with the top line in the window numbered 0.
This function scans the current buffer, calculating screen positions. It scans the buffer forward from position from, assuming that is at screen coordinates frompos, to position to or coordinates topos, whichever comes first. It returns the ending buffer position and screen coordinates.
The coordinate arguments frompos and topos are cons cells of
the form (hpos . vpos)
.
The argument width is the number of columns available to display
text; this affects handling of continuation lines. nil
means
the actual number of usable text columns in the window, which is
equivalent to the value returned by (window-width window)
.
The argument offsets is either nil
or a cons cell of the
form (hscroll . tab-offset)
. Here hscroll is
the number of columns not being displayed at the left margin; most
callers get this by calling window-hscroll
. Meanwhile,
tab-offset is the offset between column numbers on the screen and
column numbers in the buffer. This can be nonzero in a continuation
line, when the previous screen lines’ widths do not add up to a multiple
of tab-width
. It is always zero in a non-continuation line.
The window window serves only to specify which display table to
use. compute-motion
always operates on the current buffer,
regardless of what buffer is displayed in window.
The return value is a list of five elements:
(pos hpos vpos prevhpos contin)
Here pos is the buffer position where the scan stopped, vpos is the vertical screen position, and hpos is the horizontal screen position.
The result prevhpos is the horizontal position one character back
from pos. The result contin is t
if the last line
was continued after (or within) the previous character.
For example, to find the buffer position of column col of screen line
line of a certain window, pass the window’s display start location
as from and the window’s upper-left coordinates as frompos.
Pass the buffer’s (point-max)
as to, to limit the scan to
the end of the accessible portion of the buffer, and pass line and
col as topos. Here’s a function that does this:
(defun coordinates-of-position (col line) (car (compute-motion (window-start) '(0 . 0) (point-max) (cons col line) (window-width) (cons (window-hscroll) 0) (selected-window))))
When you use compute-motion
for the minibuffer, you need to use
minibuffer-prompt-width
to get the horizontal position of the
beginning of the first screen line. See Minibuffer Contents.
Next: List Motion, Previous: Text Lines, Up: Motion [Contents][Index]