LispWorks IDE User Guide

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13 The Editor

The environment has a text editor which is designed specifically to make writing Lisp source code easier. By default it emulates the GNU Emacs text editor, and you should refer to the LispWorks Editor User Guide supplied with your software, for a full description of the extensive range of functions and commands available. It can also emulate a Microsoft Windowsstyle text editor.

The Editor features a comprehensive set of menus, as well as a number of different views, and its interface is consistent with the other tools in the environment. This chapter gives a complete description of these aspects of the Editor, as well as giving you a general overview of how the Editor is used. If you have not used Emacs before, this chapter tells you all you need to know to get started.

The Editor is integrated with the other tools and offers a wide range of operations. The most commonly used of these can accessed using menu commands. The full range of editor commands is accessed via the keyboard commands described in more detail in the LispWorks Editor User Guide . These operations range from simple tasks such as navigating around a file, to more complex actions which have been specifically designed to ease the task of writing Lisp code.

By becoming familiar with the menu commands available, you can learn to use the Editor effectively in a very short space of time, before moving on to more advanced operations.

Like many other tools, the Editor offers a number of different views, which you can switch between using the tabs at the top of the Editor window. Unlike other tools, one view in particular is used more often than any other.

You can create an Editor using any of the following methods:

Note: this chapter assumes you are using the default Emacs emulation. Thus one way to open a file is with the keystrokes Ctrl+X Ctrl+F as described above. If you use Microsoft Windows keys, you would use instead the keystroke Ctrl+O .

You can always discover which key to use for a particular editor command, or conversely which command is invoked by a particular key. See Help with editing for details.

A further way to edit a file is to drag it (using the mouse) from another drag and drop enabled application such as the Windows Explorer, and drop it into the an Editor tool. This functionality is disabled by default because it requires loading of modules. You can enable it as described in The window options.

13.1 Displaying and editing files

13.2 Displaying output messages in the Editor

13.3 Displaying and swapping between buffers

13.4 Displaying Common Lisp definitions

13.5 Changed definitions

13.6 Finding definitions

13.7 Setting Editor preferences

13.8 Basic Editor commands

13.9 Other essential commands

13.10 Cutting, copying and pasting using the clipboard

13.11 Cutting, copying and pasting using the kill ring

13.12 Searching and replacing text

13.13 Using Lisp-specific commands

13.14 Help with editing


LispWorks IDE User Guide (Windows version) - 22 Dec 2009

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