which-key-autoloads.el (7420B)
1 ;;; which-key-autoloads.el --- automatically extracted autoloads (do not edit) -*- lexical-binding: t -*- 2 ;; Generated by the `loaddefs-generate' function. 3 4 ;; This file is part of GNU Emacs. 5 6 ;;; Code: 7 8 (add-to-list 'load-path (or (and load-file-name (directory-file-name (file-name-directory load-file-name))) (car load-path))) 9 10 11 12 ;;; Generated autoloads from which-key.el 13 14 (defvar which-key-mode nil "\ 15 Non-nil if Which-Key mode is enabled. 16 See the `which-key-mode' command 17 for a description of this minor mode. 18 Setting this variable directly does not take effect; 19 either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization') 20 or call the function `which-key-mode'.") 21 (custom-autoload 'which-key-mode "which-key" nil) 22 (autoload 'which-key-mode "which-key" "\ 23 Toggle which-key-mode. 24 25 This is a global minor mode. If called interactively, toggle the 26 `Which-Key mode' mode. If the prefix argument is positive, 27 enable the mode, and if it is zero or negative, disable the mode. 28 29 If called from Lisp, toggle the mode if ARG is `toggle'. Enable 30 the mode if ARG is nil, omitted, or is a positive number. 31 Disable the mode if ARG is a negative number. 32 33 To check whether the minor mode is enabled in the current buffer, 34 evaluate `(default-value \\='which-key-mode)'. 35 36 The mode's hook is called both when the mode is enabled and when 37 it is disabled. 38 39 \\{which-key-mode-map} 40 41 (fn &optional ARG)" t) 42 (autoload 'which-key-setup-side-window-right "which-key" "\ 43 Set up side-window on right." t) 44 (autoload 'which-key-setup-side-window-right-bottom "which-key" "\ 45 Set up side-window on right if space allows. 46 Otherwise, use bottom." t) 47 (autoload 'which-key-setup-side-window-bottom "which-key" "\ 48 Set up side-window that opens on bottom." t) 49 (autoload 'which-key-setup-minibuffer "which-key" "\ 50 Set up minibuffer display. 51 Do not use this setup if you use the paging commands. Instead use 52 `which-key-setup-side-window-bottom', which is nearly identical 53 but more functional." t) 54 (autoload 'which-key-add-keymap-based-replacements "which-key" "\ 55 Replace the description of KEY using REPLACEMENT in KEYMAP. 56 KEY should take a format suitable for use in `kbd'. REPLACEMENT 57 should be a cons cell of the form (STRING . COMMAND) for each 58 REPLACEMENT, where STRING is the replacement string and COMMAND 59 is a symbol corresponding to the intended command to be 60 replaced. COMMAND can be nil if the binding corresponds to a key 61 prefix. An example is 62 63 (which-key-add-keymap-based-replacements global-map 64 \"C-x w\" \\='(\"Save as\" . write-file)). 65 66 For backwards compatibility, REPLACEMENT can also be a string, 67 but the above format is preferred, and the option to use a string 68 for REPLACEMENT will eventually be removed. 69 70 (fn KEYMAP KEY REPLACEMENT &rest MORE)") 71 (function-put 'which-key-add-keymap-based-replacements 'lisp-indent-function 'defun) 72 (autoload 'which-key-add-key-based-replacements "which-key" "\ 73 Replace the description of KEY-SEQUENCE with REPLACEMENT. 74 KEY-SEQUENCE is a string suitable for use in `kbd'. REPLACEMENT 75 may either be a string, as in 76 77 (which-key-add-key-based-replacements \"C-x 1\" \"maximize\") 78 79 a cons of two strings as in 80 81 (which-key-add-key-based-replacements \"C-x 8\" 82 \\='(\"unicode\" . \"Unicode keys\")) 83 84 or a function that takes a (KEY . BINDING) cons and returns a 85 replacement. 86 87 In the second case, the second string is used to provide a longer 88 name for the keys under a prefix. 89 90 MORE allows you to specifcy additional KEY REPLACEMENT pairs. All 91 replacements are added to `which-key-replacement-alist'. 92 93 (fn KEY-SEQUENCE REPLACEMENT &rest MORE)") 94 (autoload 'which-key-add-major-mode-key-based-replacements "which-key" "\ 95 Functions like `which-key-add-key-based-replacements'. 96 The difference is that MODE specifies the `major-mode' that must 97 be active for KEY-SEQUENCE and REPLACEMENT (MORE contains 98 addition KEY-SEQUENCE REPLACEMENT pairs) to apply. 99 100 (fn MODE KEY-SEQUENCE REPLACEMENT &rest MORE)") 101 (function-put 'which-key-add-major-mode-key-based-replacements 'lisp-indent-function 'defun) 102 (autoload 'which-key-reload-key-sequence "which-key" "\ 103 Simulate entering the key sequence KEY-SEQ. 104 KEY-SEQ should be a list of events as produced by 105 `listify-key-sequence'. If nil, KEY-SEQ defaults to 106 `which-key--current-key-list'. Any prefix arguments that were 107 used are reapplied to the new key sequence. 108 109 (fn &optional KEY-SEQ)") 110 (autoload 'which-key-show-standard-help "which-key" "\ 111 Call the command in `which-key--prefix-help-cmd-backup'. 112 Usually this is `describe-prefix-bindings'. 113 114 (fn &optional _)" t) 115 (autoload 'which-key-show-next-page-no-cycle "which-key" "\ 116 Show next page of keys or `which-key-show-standard-help'." t) 117 (autoload 'which-key-show-previous-page-no-cycle "which-key" "\ 118 Show previous page of keys if one exists." t) 119 (autoload 'which-key-show-next-page-cycle "which-key" "\ 120 Show the next page of keys, cycling from end to beginning. 121 122 (fn &optional _)" t) 123 (autoload 'which-key-show-previous-page-cycle "which-key" "\ 124 Show the previous page of keys, cycling from beginning to end. 125 126 (fn &optional _)" t) 127 (autoload 'which-key-show-top-level "which-key" "\ 128 Show top-level bindings. 129 130 (fn &optional _)" t) 131 (autoload 'which-key-show-major-mode "which-key" "\ 132 Show top-level bindings in the map of the current major mode. 133 This function will also detect evil bindings made using 134 `evil-define-key' in this map. These bindings will depend on the 135 current evil state. 136 137 (fn &optional ALL)" t) 138 (autoload 'which-key-show-full-major-mode "which-key" "\ 139 Show all bindings in the map of the current major mode. 140 This function will also detect evil bindings made using 141 `evil-define-key' in this map. These bindings will depend on the 142 current evil state. " t) 143 (autoload 'which-key-dump-bindings "which-key" "\ 144 Dump bindings from PREFIX into buffer named BUFFER-NAME. 145 PREFIX should be a string suitable for `kbd'. 146 147 (fn PREFIX BUFFER-NAME)" t) 148 (autoload 'which-key-undo-key "which-key" "\ 149 Undo last keypress and force which-key update. 150 151 (fn &optional _)" t) 152 (autoload 'which-key-C-h-dispatch "which-key" "\ 153 Dispatch C-h commands by looking up key in `which-key-C-h-map'. 154 This command is always accessible (from any prefix) if 155 `which-key-use-C-h-commands' is non nil." t) 156 (autoload 'which-key-show-keymap "which-key" "\ 157 Show the top-level bindings in KEYMAP using which-key. 158 KEYMAP is selected interactively from all available keymaps. 159 160 If NO-PAGING is non-nil, which-key will not intercept subsequent 161 keypresses for the paging functionality. 162 163 (fn KEYMAP &optional NO-PAGING)" t) 164 (autoload 'which-key-show-full-keymap "which-key" "\ 165 Show all bindings in KEYMAP using which-key. 166 KEYMAP is selected interactively from all available keymaps. 167 168 (fn KEYMAP)" t) 169 (autoload 'which-key-show-minor-mode-keymap "which-key" "\ 170 Show the top-level bindings in KEYMAP using which-key. 171 KEYMAP is selected interactively by mode in 172 `minor-mode-map-alist'. 173 174 (fn &optional ALL)" t) 175 (autoload 'which-key-show-full-minor-mode-keymap "which-key" "\ 176 Show all bindings in KEYMAP using which-key. 177 KEYMAP is selected interactively by mode in 178 `minor-mode-map-alist'." t) 179 (register-definition-prefixes "which-key" '("evil-state" "which-key-")) 180 181 ;;; End of scraped data 182 183 (provide 'which-key-autoloads) 184 185 ;; Local Variables: 186 ;; version-control: never 187 ;; no-byte-compile: t 188 ;; no-update-autoloads: t 189 ;; no-native-compile: t 190 ;; coding: utf-8-emacs-unix 191 ;; End: 192 193 ;;; which-key-autoloads.el ends here