32.4 Inserting Text
Insertion means adding new text to a buffer. The inserted text goes at point—between the character before point and the character after point. Some insertion functions leave point before the inserted text, while other functions leave it after. We call the former insertion after point and the latter insertion before point.
Insertion moves markers located at positions after the insertion point, so that they stay with the surrounding text (see Markers). When a marker points at the place of insertion, insertion may or may not relocate the marker, depending on the marker’s insertion type (see Marker Insertion Types). Certain special functions such as insert-before-markers
relocate all such markers to point after the inserted text, regardless of the markers’ insertion type.
Insertion functions signal an error if the current buffer is read-only (see Read Only Buffers) or if they insert within read-only text (see Special Properties).
These functions copy text characters from strings and buffers along with their properties. The inserted characters have exactly the same properties as the characters they were copied from. By contrast, characters specified as separate arguments, not part of a string or buffer, inherit their text properties from the neighboring text.
The insertion functions convert text from unibyte to multibyte in order to insert in a multibyte buffer, and vice versa—if the text comes from a string or from a buffer. However, they do not convert unibyte character codes 128 through 255 to multibyte characters, not even if the current buffer is a multibyte buffer. See Converting Representations.
function
insert \&rest args
This function inserts the strings and/or characters args
into the current buffer, at point, moving point forward. In other words, it inserts the text before point. An error is signaled unless all args
are either strings or characters. The value is nil
.
function
insert-before-markers \&rest args
This function inserts the strings and/or characters args
into the current buffer, at point, moving point forward. An error is signaled unless all args
are either strings or characters. The value is nil
.
This function is unlike the other insertion functions in that it relocates markers initially pointing at the insertion point, to point after the inserted text. If an overlay begins at the insertion point, the inserted text falls outside the overlay; if a nonempty overlay ends at the insertion point, the inserted text falls inside that overlay.
command
insert-char character \&optional count inherit
This command inserts count
instances of character
into the current buffer before point. The argument count
must be an integer, and character
must be a character.
If called interactively, this command prompts for character
using its Unicode name or its code point. See Inserting Text in The GNU Emacs Manual.
This function does not convert unibyte character codes 128 through 255 to multibyte characters, not even if the current buffer is a multibyte buffer. See Converting Representations.
If inherit
is non-nil
, the inserted characters inherit sticky text properties from the two characters before and after the insertion point. See Sticky Properties.
function
insert-buffer-substring from-buffer-or-name \&optional start end
This function inserts a portion of buffer from-buffer-or-name
into the current buffer before point. The text inserted is the region between start
(inclusive) and end
(exclusive). (These arguments default to the beginning and end of the accessible portion of that buffer.) This function returns nil
.
In this example, the form is executed with buffer ‘bar
’ as the current buffer. We assume that buffer ‘bar
’ is initially empty.
---------- Buffer: foo ----------
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all
---------- Buffer: foo ----------
(insert-buffer-substring "foo" 1 20)
⇒ nil
---------- Buffer: bar ----------
We hold these truth∗
---------- Buffer: bar ----------
function
insert-buffer-substring-no-properties from-buffer-or-name \&optional start end
This is like insert-buffer-substring
except that it does not copy any text properties.
See Sticky Properties, for other insertion functions that inherit text properties from the nearby text in addition to inserting it. Whitespace inserted by indentation functions also inherits text properties.