15.3 Defining Customization Variables
Customizable variables, also called user options, are global Lisp variables whose values can be set through the Customize interface. Unlike other global variables, which are defined with defvar
(see Defining Variables), customizable variables are defined using the defcustom
macro. In addition to calling defvar
as a subroutine, defcustom
states how the variable should be displayed in the Customize interface, the values it is allowed to take, etc.
macro
defcustom option standard doc [keyword value]…​
This macro declares option
as a user option (i.e., a customizable variable). You should not quote option
.
The argument standard
is an expression that specifies the standard value for option
. Evaluating the defcustom
form evaluates standard
, but does not necessarily bind the option to that value. If option
already has a default value, it is left unchanged. If the user has already saved a customization for option
, the user’s customized value is installed as the default value. Otherwise, the result of evaluating standard
is installed as the default value.
Like defvar
, this macro marks option
as a special variable, meaning that it should always be dynamically bound. If option
is already lexically bound, that lexical binding remains in effect until the binding construct exits. See Variable Scoping.
The expression standard
can be evaluated at various other times, too—whenever the customization facility needs to know option
’s standard value. So be sure to use an expression which is harmless to evaluate at any time.
The argument doc
specifies the documentation string for the variable.
If a defcustom
does not specify any :group
, the last group defined with defgroup
in the same file will be used. This way, most defcustom
do not need an explicit :group
.
When you evaluate a defcustom
form with C-M-x
in Emacs Lisp mode (eval-defun
), a special feature of eval-defun
arranges to set the variable unconditionally, without testing whether its value is void. (The same feature applies to defvar
, see Defining Variables.) Using eval-defun
on a defcustom that is already defined calls the :set
function (see below), if there is one.
If you put a defcustom
in a pre-loaded Emacs Lisp file (see Building Emacs), the standard value installed at dump time might be incorrect, e.g., because another variable that it depends on has not been assigned the right value yet. In that case, use custom-reevaluate-setting
, described below, to re-evaluate the standard value after Emacs starts up.
In addition to the keywords listed in Common Keywords, this macro accepts the following keywords:
:type type
​
Use type
as the data type for this option. It specifies which values are legitimate, and how to display the value (see Customization Types). Every defcustom
should specify a value for this keyword.
:options value-list
​
Specify the list of reasonable values for use in this option. The user is not restricted to using only these values, but they are offered as convenient alternatives.
This is meaningful only for certain types, currently including hook
, plist
and alist
. See the definition of the individual types for a description of how to use :options
.
:set setfunction
​
Specify setfunction
as the way to change the value of this option when using the Customize interface. The function setfunction
should take two arguments, a symbol (the option name) and the new value, and should do whatever is necessary to update the value properly for this option (which may not mean simply setting the option as a Lisp variable); preferably, though, it should not modify its value argument destructively. The default for setfunction
is set-default
.
If you specify this keyword, the variable’s documentation string should describe how to do the same job in hand-written Lisp code.
:get getfunction
​
Specify getfunction
as the way to extract the value of this option. The function getfunction
should take one argument, a symbol, and should return whatever customize should use as the current value for that symbol (which need not be the symbol’s Lisp value). The default is default-value
.
You have to really understand the workings of Custom to use :get
correctly. It is meant for values that are treated in Custom as variables but are not actually stored in Lisp variables. It is almost surely a mistake to specify getfunction
for a value that really is stored in a Lisp variable.
:initialize function
​
function
should be a function used to initialize the variable when the defcustom
is evaluated. It should take two arguments, the option name (a symbol) and the value. Here are some predefined functions meant for use in this way:
custom-initialize-set
​
Use the variable’s :set
function to initialize the variable, but do not reinitialize it if it is already non-void.
custom-initialize-default
​
Like custom-initialize-set
, but use the function set-default
to set the variable, instead of the variable’s :set
function. This is the usual choice for a variable whose :set
function enables or disables a minor mode; with this choice, defining the variable will not call the minor mode function, but customizing the variable will do so.
custom-initialize-reset
​
Always use the :set
function to initialize the variable. If the variable is already non-void, reset it by calling the :set
function using the current value (returned by the :get
method). This is the default :initialize
function.
custom-initialize-changed
​
Use the :set
function to initialize the variable, if it is already set or has been customized; otherwise, just use set-default
.
custom-initialize-delay
​
This function behaves like custom-initialize-set
, but it delays the actual initialization to the next Emacs start. This should be used in files that are preloaded (or for autoloaded variables), so that the initialization is done in the run-time context rather than the build-time context. This also has the side-effect that the (delayed) initialization is performed with the :set
function. See Building Emacs.
:local value
​
If the value
is t
, mark option
as automatically buffer-local; if the value is permanent
, also set option
s permanent-local
property to t
. See Creating Buffer-Local.
:risky value
​
Set the variable’s risky-local-variable
property to value
(see File Local Variables).
:safe function
​
Set the variable’s safe-local-variable
property to function
(see File Local Variables).
:set-after variables
​
When setting variables according to saved customizations, make sure to set the variables variables
before this one; i.e., delay setting this variable until after those others have been handled. Use :set-after
if setting this variable won’t work properly unless those other variables already have their intended values.
It is useful to specify the :require
keyword for an option that turns on a certain feature. This causes Emacs to load the feature, if it is not already loaded, whenever the option is set. See Common Keywords. Here is an example:
(defcustom frobnicate-automatically nil
"Non-nil means automatically frobnicate all buffers."
:type 'boolean
:require 'frobnicate-mode
:group 'frobnicate)
If a customization item has a type such as hook
or alist
, which supports :options
, you can add additional values to the list from outside the defcustom
declaration by calling custom-add-frequent-value
. For example, if you define a function my-lisp-mode-initialization
intended to be called from emacs-lisp-mode-hook
, you might want to add that to the list of reasonable values for emacs-lisp-mode-hook
, but not by editing its definition. You can do it thus:
(custom-add-frequent-value 'emacs-lisp-mode-hook
'my-lisp-mode-initialization)
function
custom-add-frequent-value symbol value​
For the customization option symbol
, add value
to the list of reasonable values.
The precise effect of adding a value depends on the customization type of symbol
.
Internally, defcustom
uses the symbol property standard-value
to record the expression for the standard value, saved-value
to record the value saved by the user with the customization buffer, and customized-value
to record the value set by the user with the customization buffer, but not saved. See Symbol Properties. In addition, there’s themed-value
, which is used to record the value set by a theme (see Custom Themes). These properties are lists, the car of which is an expression that evaluates to the value.
function
custom-reevaluate-setting symbol​
This function re-evaluates the standard value of symbol
, which should be a user option declared via defcustom
. If the variable was customized, this function re-evaluates the saved value instead. Then it sets the user option to that value (using the option’s :set
property if that is defined).
This is useful for customizable options that are defined before their value could be computed correctly. For example, during startup Emacs calls this function for some user options that were defined in pre-loaded Emacs Lisp files, but whose initial values depend on information available only at run-time.
function
custom-variable-p arg​
This function returns non-nil
if arg
is a customizable variable. A customizable variable is either a variable that has a standard-value
or custom-autoload
property (usually meaning it was declared with defcustom
), or an alias for another customizable variable.