This is transient.info, produced by makeinfo version 6.5 from transient.texi. Copyright (C) 2018-2020 Jonas Bernoulli You can redistribute this document and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This document is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. INFO-DIR-SECTION Emacs START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY * Transient: (transient). Transient Commands. END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY  File: transient.info, Node: Top, Next: Introduction, Up: (dir) Transient User and Developer Manual *********************************** Taking inspiration from prefix keys and prefix arguments, Transient implements a similar abstraction involving a prefix command, infix arguments and suffix commands. We could call this abstraction a "transient command", but because it always involves at least two commands (a prefix and a suffix) we prefer to call it just a "transient". When the user calls a transient prefix command, then a transient (temporary) keymap is activated, which binds the transient’s infix and suffix commands, and functions that control the transient state are added to ‘pre-command-hook’ and ‘post-command-hook’. The available suffix and infix commands and their state are shown in a popup buffer until the transient is exited by invoking a suffix command. Calling an infix command causes its value to be changed, possibly by reading a new value in the minibuffer. Calling a suffix command usually causes the transient to be exited but suffix commands can also be configured to not exit the transient. This manual is for Transient version 0.2.0 (v0.2.0-8-gc94cff7+1). Copyright (C) 2018-2020 Jonas Bernoulli You can redistribute this document and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This document is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. * Menu: * Introduction:: * Usage:: * Other Options:: * Modifying Existing Transients:: * Defining New Commands:: * Classes and Methods:: * Related Abstractions and Packages:: * FAQ:: * Keystroke Index:: * Command Index:: * Function Index:: * Variable Index:: — The Detailed Node Listing — Usage * Invoking Transients:: * Aborting and Resuming Transients:: * Common Suffix Commands:: * Saving Values:: * Using History:: * Getting Help for Suffix Commands:: * Enabling and Disabling Suffixes:: * Other Commands:: Defining New Commands * Defining Transients:: * Binding Suffix and Infix Commands:: * Defining Suffix and Infix Commands:: * Using Infix Arguments:: * Transient State:: Binding Suffix and Infix Commands * Group Specifications:: * Suffix Specifications:: Classes and Methods * Group Classes:: * Group Methods:: * Prefix Classes:: * Suffix Classes:: * Suffix Methods:: * Prefix Slots:: * Suffix Slots:: * Predicate Slots:: Suffix Methods * Suffix Value Methods:: * Suffix Format Methods:: Related Abstractions and Packages * Comparison With Prefix Keys and Prefix Arguments:: * Comparison With Other Packages::  File: transient.info, Node: Introduction, Next: Usage, Prev: Top, Up: Top 1 Introduction ************** Taking inspiration from prefix keys and prefix arguments, Transient implements a similar abstraction involving a prefix command, infix arguments and suffix commands. We could call this abstraction a "transient command", but because it always involves at least two commands (a prefix and a suffix) we prefer to call it just a "transient". Transient keymaps are a feature provided by Emacs. Transients as implemented by this package involve the use of transient keymaps. Emacs provides a feature that it calls "prefix commands". When we talk about "prefix commands" in this manual, then we mean our own kind of "prefix commands", unless specified otherwise. To avoid ambiguity we sometimes use the terms "transient prefix command" for our kind and "regular prefix command" for Emacs’ kind. When the user calls a transient prefix command, then a transient (temporary) keymap is activated, which binds the transient’s infix and suffix commands, and functions that control the transient state are added to ‘pre-command-hook’ and ‘post-command-hook’. The available suffix and infix commands and their state are shown in a popup buffer until the transient state is exited by invoking a suffix command. Calling an infix command causes its value to be changed. How that is done depends on the type of the infix command. The simplest case is an infix command that represents a command-line argument that does not take a value. Invoking such an infix command causes the switch to be toggled on or off. More complex infix commands may read a value from the user, using the minibuffer. Calling a suffix command usually causes the transient to be exited; the transient keymaps and hook functions are removed, the popup buffer no longer shows information about the (no longer bound) suffix commands, the values of some public global variables are set, while some internal global variables are unset, and finally the command is actually called. Suffix commands can also be configured to not exit the transient. A suffix command can, but does not have to, use the infix arguments in much the same way it can choose to use or ignore the prefix arguments. For a suffix command that was invoked from a transient the variable ‘transient-current-suffixes’ and the function ‘transient-args’ serve about the same purpose as the variables ‘prefix-arg’ and ‘current-prefix-arg’ do for any command that was called after the prefix arguments have been set using a command such as ‘universal-argument’. The information shown in the popup buffer while a transient is active looks a bit like this: ,----------------------------------------- |Arguments | -f Force (--force) | -a Annotate (--annotate) | |Create | t tag | r release `----------------------------------------- This is a simplified version of ‘magit-tag’. Info manuals do not support images or colored text, so the above "screenshot" lacks some information; in practice you would be able to tell whether the arguments ‘--force’ and ‘--annotate’ are enabled or not based on their color. Transient can be used to implement simple "command dispatchers". The main benefit then is that the user can see all the available commands in a popup buffer. That is useful by itself because it frees the user from having to remember all the keys that are valid after a certain prefix key or command. Magit’s ‘magit-dispatch’ command is an example of using Transient to merely implement a command dispatcher. In addition to that, Transient also allows users to interactively pass arguments to commands. These arguments can be much more complex than what is reasonable when using prefix arguments. There is a limit to how many aspects of a command can be controlled using prefix arguments. Furthermore what a certain prefix argument means for different commands can be completely different, and users have to read documentation to learn and then commit to memory what a certain prefix argument means to a certain command. Transient suffix commands on the other hand can accept dozens of different arguments without the user having to remember anything. When using Transient, then one can call a command with arguments that are just as complex as when calling the same function non-interactively using code. Invoking a transient command with arguments is similar to invoking a command in a shell with command-line completion and history enabled. One benefit of the Transient interface is that it remembers history not only on a global level ("this command was invoked using these arguments and previously it was invoked using those other arguments"), but also remembers the values of individual arguments independently. See *note Using History::. After a transient prefix command is invoked ‘C-h ’ can be used to show the documentation for the infix or suffix command that ‘’ is bound to (see *note Getting Help for Suffix Commands::) and infixes and suffixes can be removed from the transient using ‘C-x l ’. Infixes and suffixes that are disabled by default can be enabled the same way. See *note Enabling and Disabling Suffixes::. Transient ships with support for a few different types of specialized infix commands. A command that sets a command line option for example has different needs than a command that merely toggles a boolean flag. Additionally Transient provides abstractions for defining new types, which the author of Transient did not anticipate (or didn’t get around to implementing yet).  File: transient.info, Node: Usage, Next: Other Options, Prev: Introduction, Up: Top 2 Usage ******* * Menu: * Invoking Transients:: * Aborting and Resuming Transients:: * Common Suffix Commands:: * Saving Values:: * Using History:: * Getting Help for Suffix Commands:: * Enabling and Disabling Suffixes:: * Other Commands::  File: transient.info, Node: Invoking Transients, Next: Aborting and Resuming Transients, Up: Usage 2.1 Invoking Transients ======================= A transient prefix command is invoked like any other command by pressing the key that is bound to that command. The main difference to other commands is that a transient prefix command activates a transient keymap, which temporarily binds the transient’s infix and suffix commands. Bindings from other keymaps may, or may not, be disabled while the transient state is in effect. There are two kinds of commands that are available after invoking a transient prefix command; infix and suffix commands. Infix commands set some value (which is then shown in a popup buffer), without leaving the transient. Suffix commands on the other hand usually quit the transient and they may use the values set by the infix commands, i.e. the infix *arguments*. Instead of setting arguments to be used by a suffix command, infix commands may also set some value by side-effect.  File: transient.info, Node: Aborting and Resuming Transients, Next: Common Suffix Commands, Prev: Invoking Transients, Up: Usage 2.2 Aborting and Resuming Transients ==================================== To quit the transient without invoking a suffix command press ‘C-g’. Key bindings in transient keymaps may be longer than a single event. After pressing a valid prefix key, all commands whose bindings do not begin with that prefix key are temporarily unavailable and grayed out. To abort the prefix key press ‘C-g’ (which in this case only quits the prefix key, but not the complete transient). A transient prefix command can be bound as a suffix of another transient. Invoking such a suffix replaces the current transient state with a new transient state, i.e. the available bindings change and the information displayed in the popup buffer is updated accordingly. Pressing ‘C-g’ while a nested transient is active only quits the innermost transient, causing a return to the previous transient. ‘C-q’ or ‘C-z’ on the other hand always exits all transients. If you use the latter, then you can later resume the stack of transients using ‘M-x transient-resume’. ‘C-g’ (‘transient-quit-seq’) ‘C-g’ (‘transient-quit-one’) This key quits the currently active incomplete key sequence, if any, or else the current transient. When quitting the current transient, then it returns to the previous transient, if any. Transient’s predecessor bound ‘q’ instead of ‘C-g’ to the quit command. To learn how to get that binding back see ‘transient-bind-q-to-quit’’s doc string. ‘C-q’ (‘transient-quit-all’) This command quits the currently active incomplete key sequence, if any, and all transients, including the active transient and all suspended transients, if any. ‘C-z’ (‘transient-suspend’) Like ‘transient-quit-all’, this command quits an incomplete key sequence, if any, and all transients. Additionally it saves the stack of transients so that it can easily be resumed (which is particularly useful if you quickly need to do "something else" and the stack is deeper than a single transient and/or you have already changed the values of some infix arguments). Note that only a single stack of transients can be saved at a time. If another stack is already saved, then saving a new stack discards the previous stack. ‘M-x transient-resume’ (‘transient-resume’) This command resumes the previously suspended stack of transients, if any.  File: transient.info, Node: Common Suffix Commands, Next: Saving Values, Prev: Aborting and Resuming Transients, Up: Usage 2.3 Common Suffix Commands ========================== A few shared suffix commands are available in all transients. These suffix commands are not shown in the popup buffer by default. Most of these commands are bound to ‘C-x ’ and after pressing ‘C-x’ a section featuring all common commands is temporarily shown in the popup buffer. After invoking one of these commands, that section disappears again. Note however that one of these commands is described as "Show common permanently"; invoke that if you want the common commands to always be shown for all transients. ‘C-x t’ (‘transient-toggle-common’) This command toggles whether the generic commands that are common to all transients are always displayed or only after typing the incomplete prefix key sequence ‘C-x’. This only affects the current Emacs session. -- User Option: transient-show-common-commands This option controls whether shared suffix commands are shown alongside the transient-specific infix and suffix commands. By default the shared commands are not shown to avoid overwhelming the user with to many options. While a transient is active, pressing ‘C-x’ always shows the common command. The value of this option can be changed for the current Emacs session by typing ‘C-x t’ while a transient is active. The other common commands are described in either the previous node or in one of the following nodes. Some of Transient’s key bindings differ from the respective bindings of Magit-Popup; see *note FAQ:: for more information.  File: transient.info, Node: Saving Values, Next: Using History, Prev: Common Suffix Commands, Up: Usage 2.4 Saving Values ================= After setting the infix arguments in a transient, the user can save those arguments for future invocations. Most transients will start out with the saved arguments when they are invoked. There are a few exceptions though. Some transients are designed so that the value that they use is stored externally as the buffer-local value of some variable. Invoking such a transient again uses the buffer-local value. (1) If the user does not save the value and just exits using a regular suffix command, then the value is merely saved to the transient’s history. That value won’t be used when the transient is next invoked but it is easily accessible (see *note Using History::). ‘C-x s’ (‘transient-set’) This command saves the value of the active transient for this Emacs session. ‘C-x C-s’ (‘transient-save’) Save the value of the active transient persistently across Emacs sessions. -- User Option: transient-values-file This file is used to persist the values of transients between Emacs sessions. ---------- Footnotes ---------- (1) ‘magit-diff’ and ‘magit-log’ are two prominent examples, and their handling of buffer-local values is actually a bit more complicated than outlined above and even customizable. This is something I am rethinking, but I don’t want to rush any changes.)  File: transient.info, Node: Using History, Next: Getting Help for Suffix Commands, Prev: Saving Values, Up: Usage 2.5 Using History ================= Every time the user invokes a suffix command the transient’s current value is saved to its history. These values can be cycled through the same way one can cycle through the history of commands that read user-input in the minibuffer. ‘M-p’ (‘transient-history-prev’) This command switches to the previous value used for the active transient. ‘M-n’ (‘transient-history-next’) This command switches to the next value used for the active transient. In addition to the transient-wide history, Transient of course supports per-infix history. When an infix reads user-input using the minibuffer, then the user can use the regular minibuffer history commands to cycle through previously used values. Usually the same keys as those mentioned above are bound to those commands. Authors of transients should arrange for different infix commands that read the same kind of value to also use the same history key (see *note Suffix Slots::). Both kinds of history are saved to a file when Emacs is exited. -- User Option: transient-history-file This file is used to persist the history of transients and their infixes between Emacs sessions. -- User Option: transient-history-limit This option controls how many history elements are kept at the time the history is saved in ‘transient-history-file’.  File: transient.info, Node: Getting Help for Suffix Commands, Next: Enabling and Disabling Suffixes, Prev: Using History, Up: Usage 2.6 Getting Help for Suffix Commands ==================================== Transients can have many suffixes and infixes that the user might not be familiar with. To make it trivial to get help for these, Transient provides access to the documentation directly from the active transient. ‘C-h’ (‘transient-help’) This command enters help mode. When help mode is active, then typing ‘’ shows information about the suffix command that ‘’ normally is bound to (instead of invoking it). Pressing ‘C-h’ a second time shows information about the _prefix_ command. After typing ‘’ the stack of transient states is suspended and information about the suffix command is shown instead. Typing ‘q’ in the help buffer buries that buffer and resumes the transient state. What sort of documentation is shown depends on how the transient was defined. For infix commands that represent command-line arguments this ideally shows the appropriate manpage. ‘transient-help’ then tries to jump to the correct location within that. Info manuals are also supported. The fallback is to show the command’s doc string, for non-infix suffixes this is usually appropriate.  File: transient.info, Node: Enabling and Disabling Suffixes, Next: Other Commands, Prev: Getting Help for Suffix Commands, Up: Usage 2.7 Enabling and Disabling Suffixes =================================== The user base of a package that uses transients can be very diverse. This is certainly the case for Magit; some users have been using it and Git for a decade, while others are just getting started now. For that reason a mechanism is needed that authors can use to classify a transient’s infixes and suffixes along the essentials...everything spectrum. We use the term "levels" to describe that mechanism. Each suffix command is placed on a level and each transient has a level (called transient-level), which controls which suffix commands are available. Integers between 1 and 7 (inclusive) are valid levels. For suffixes, 0 is also valid; it means that the suffix is not displayed at any level. The levels of individual transients and/or their individual suffixes can be changed interactively, by invoking the transient and then pressing ‘C-x l’ to enter the "edit" mode, see below. The default level for both transients and their suffixes is 4. The ‘transient-default-level’ option only controls the default for transients. The default suffix level is always 4. The authors of transients should place certain suffixes on a higher level, if they expect that it won’t be of use to most users, and they should place very important suffixes on a lower level, so that they remain available even if the user lowers the transient level. (Magit currently places nearly all suffixes on level 4 and lower levels are not used at all yet. So for the time being you should not set a lower default level and using a higher level might not give you as many additional suffixes as you hoped.) -- User Option: transient-default-level This option controls which suffix levels are made available by default. It sets the transient-level for transients for which the user has not set that individually. -- User Option: transient-levels-file This file is used to persist the levels of transients and their suffixes between Emacs sessions. ‘C-x l’ (‘transient-set-level’) This command enters edit mode. When edit mode is active, then all infixes and suffixes that are currently usable are displayed along with their levels. The colors of the levels indicate whether they are enabled or not. The level of the transient is also displayed along with some usage information. In edit mode, pressing the key that would usually invoke a certain suffix instead prompts the user for the level that suffix should be placed on. Help mode is available in edit mode. To change the transient level press ‘C-x l’ again. To exit edit mode press ‘C-g’. Note that edit mode does not display any suffixes that are not currently usable. ‘magit-rebase’ for example shows different suffixes depending on whether a rebase is already in progress or not. The predicates also apply in edit mode. Therefore, to control which suffixes are available given a certain state, you have to make sure that that state is currently active.  File: transient.info, Node: Other Commands, Prev: Enabling and Disabling Suffixes, Up: Usage 2.8 Other Commands ================== When invoking a transient in a small frame, the transient window may not show the complete buffer, making it necessary to scroll, using the following commands. These commands are never shown in the transient window, and the key bindings are the same as for ‘scroll-up-command’ and ‘scroll-down-command’ in other buffers. -- Command: transient-scroll-up arg This command scrolls text of transient popup window upward ARG lines. If ARG is ‘nil’, then it scrolls near full screen. This is a wrapper around ‘scroll-up-command’ (which see). -- Command: transient-scroll-down arg This command scrolls text of transient popup window down ARG lines. If ARG is ‘nil’, then it scrolls near full screen. This is a wrapper around ‘scroll-down-command’ (which see).  File: transient.info, Node: Other Options, Next: Modifying Existing Transients, Prev: Usage, Up: Top 3 Other Options *************** -- User Option: transient-show-popup This option controls whether the current transient’s infix and suffix commands are shown in the popup buffer. • If ‘t’ (the default) then the popup buffer is shown as soon as a transient prefix command is invoked. • If ‘nil’, then the popup buffer is not shown unless the user explicitly requests it, by pressing an incomplete prefix key sequence. • If a number, then the a brief one-line summary is shown instead of the popup buffer. If zero or negative, then not even that summary is shown; only the pressed key itself is shown. The popup is shown when the user explicitly requests it by pressing an incomplete prefix key sequence. Unless this is zero, then the popup is shown after that many seconds of inactivity (using the absolute value). -- User Option: transient-enable-popup-navigation This option controls whether navigation commands are enabled in the transient popup. While a transient is active the transient popup buffer is not the current buffer, making it necessary to use dedicated commands to act on that buffer itself. This is disabled by default. If this option is non-nil, then the following features are available: • ‘’ moves the cursor to the previous suffix. ‘’ moves the cursor to the next suffix. ‘RET’ invokes the suffix the cursor is on. • ‘’ invokes the clicked on suffix. • ‘C-s’ and ‘C-r’ start isearch in the popup buffer. -- User Option: transient-display-buffer-action This option specifies the action used to display the transient popup buffer. The transient popup buffer is displayed in a window using ‘(display-buffer buf transient-display-buffer-action)’. The value of this option has the form ‘(FUNCTION . ALIST)’, where FUNCTION is a function or a list of functions. Each such function should accept two arguments: a buffer to display and an alist of the same form as ALIST. See *note (elisp)Choosing Window::. The default is ‘(display-buffer-in-side-window (side . bottom))’. This displays the window at the bottom of the selected frame. Another useful value is ‘(display-buffer-below-selected)’. This is what ‘magit-popup’ used by default. For more alternatives see *note (elisp)Display Action Functions::. It may be possible to display the window in another frame, but whether that works in practice depends on the window-manager. If the window manager selects the new window (Emacs frame), then it doesn’t work. If you change the value of this option, then you might also want to change the value of ‘transient-mode-line-format’. -- User Option: transient-mode-line-format This option controls whether the transient popup buffer has a mode-line, separator line, or neither. If ‘nil’, then the buffer has no mode-line. If the buffer is not displayed right above the echo area, then this probably is not a good value. If ‘line’ (the default), then the buffer also has no mode-line, but a thin line is drawn instead, using the background color of the face ‘transient-separator’. Termcap frames cannot display thin lines and therefore fallback to treating ‘line’ like ‘nil’. Otherwise this can be any mode-line format. See *note (elisp)Mode Line Format:: for details. -- User Option: transient-read-with-initial-input This option controls whether the last history element is used as the initial minibuffer input when reading the value of an infix argument from the user. If ‘nil’, then there is no initial input and the first element has to be accessed the same way as the older elements. -- User Option: transient-highlight-mismatched-keys This option controls whether key bindings of infix commands that do not match the respective command-line argument should be highlighted. For other infix commands this option has no effect. When this option is non-nil, then the key binding for an infix argument is highlighted when only a long argument (e.g. ‘--verbose’) is specified but no shorthand (e.g ‘-v’). In the rare case that a shorthand is specified but the key binding does not match, then it is highlighted differently. Highlighting mismatched key bindings is useful when learning the arguments of the underlying command-line tool; you wouldn’t want to learn any short-hands that do not actually exist. The highlighting is done using one of the faces ‘transient-mismatched-key’ and ‘transient-nonstandard-key’. -- User Option: transient-substitute-key-function This function is used to modify key bindings. If the value of this option is nil (the default), then no substitution is performed. This function is called with one argument, the prefix object, and must return a key binding description, either the existing key description it finds in the ‘key’ slot, or the key description that replaces the prefix key. It could be used to make other substitutions, but that is discouraged. For example, ‘=’ is hard to reach using my custom keyboard layout, so I substitute ‘(’ for that, which is easy to reach using a layout optimized for lisp. (setq transient-substitute-key-function (lambda (obj) (let ((key (oref obj key))) (if (string-match "\\`\\(=\\)[a-zA-Z]" key) (replace-match "(" t t key 1) key)))) -- User Option: transient-detect-key-conflicts This option controls whether key binding conflicts should be detected at the time the transient is invoked. If so, then this results in an error, which prevents the transient from being used. Because of that, conflicts are ignored by default. Conflicts cannot be determined earlier, i.e. when the transient is being defined and when new suffixes are being added, because at that time there can be false-positives. It is actually valid for multiple suffixes to share a common key binding, provided the predicates of those suffixes prevent that more than one of them is enabled at a time. -- User Option: transient-force-fixed-pitch This option controls whether to force the use of a monospaced font in popup buffer. Even if you use a proportional font for the ‘default’ face, you might still want to use a monospaced font in transient’s popup buffer. Setting this option to t causes ‘default’ to be remapped to ‘fixed-pitch’ in that buffer.  File: transient.info, Node: Modifying Existing Transients, Next: Defining New Commands, Prev: Other Options, Up: Top 4 Modifying Existing Transients ******************************* To an extent transients can be customized interactively, see *note Enabling and Disabling Suffixes::. This section explains how existing transients can be further modified non-interactively. The following functions share a few arguments: • PREFIX is a transient prefix command, a symbol. • SUFFIX is a transient infix or suffix specification in the same form as expected by ‘transient-define-prefix’. Note that an infix is a special kind of suffix. Depending on context "suffixes" means "suffixes (including infixes)" or "non-infix suffixes". Here it means the former. See *note Suffix Specifications::. SUFFIX may also be a group in the same form as expected by ‘transient-define-prefix’. See *note Group Specifications::. • LOC is a command, a key vector, a key description (a string as returned by ‘key-description’), or a list specifying coordinates (the last element may also be a command or key). For example ‘(1 0 -1)’ identifies the last suffix (‘-1’) of the first subgroup (‘0’) of the second group (‘1’). If LOC is a list of coordinates, then it can be used to identify a group, not just an individual suffix command. The function ‘transient-get-suffix’ can be useful to determine whether a certain coordination list identifies the suffix or group that you expect it to identify. In hairy cases it may be necessary to look at the definition of the transient prefix command. These functions operate on the information stored in the ‘transient--layout’ property of the PREFIX symbol. Suffix entries in that tree are not objects but have the form ‘(LEVEL CLASS PLIST)’, where plist should set at least ‘:key’, ‘:description’ and ‘:command’. -- Function: transient-insert-suffix prefix loc suffix This function inserts suffix or group SUFFIX into PREFIX before LOC. -- Function: transient-append-suffix prefix loc suffix This function inserts suffix or group SUFFIX into PREFIX after LOC. -- Function: transient-replace-suffix prefix loc suffix This function replaces the suffix or group at LOC in PREFIX with suffix or group SUFFIX. -- Function: transient-remove-suffix prefix loc This function removes the suffix or group at LOC in PREFIX. -- Function: transient-get-suffix prefix loc This function returns the suffix or group at LOC in PREFIX. The returned value has the form mentioned above. -- Function: transient-suffix-put prefix loc prop value This function edits the suffix or group at LOC in PREFIX, by setting the PROP of its plist to VALUE. Most of these functions do not signal an error if they cannot perform the requested modification. The functions that insert new suffixes show a warning if LOC cannot be found in PREFIX, without signaling an error. The reason for doing it like this is that establishing a key binding (and that is what we essentially are trying to do here) should not prevent the rest of the configuration from loading. Among these functions only ‘transient-get-suffix’ and ‘transient-suffix-put’ may signal an error.  File: transient.info, Node: Defining New Commands, Next: Classes and Methods, Prev: Modifying Existing Transients, Up: Top 5 Defining New Commands *********************** * Menu: * Defining Transients:: * Binding Suffix and Infix Commands:: * Defining Suffix and Infix Commands:: * Using Infix Arguments:: * Transient State::  File: transient.info, Node: Defining Transients, Next: Binding Suffix and Infix Commands, Up: Defining New Commands 5.1 Defining Transients ======================= A transient consists of a prefix command and at least one suffix command, though usually a transient has several infix and suffix commands. The below macro defines the transient prefix command *and* binds the transient’s infix and suffix commands. In other words, it defines the complete transient, not just the transient prefix command that is used to invoke that transient. -- Macro: transient-define-prefix name arglist [docstring] [keyword value]... group... [body...] This macro defines NAME as a transient prefix command and binds the transient’s infix and suffix commands. ARGLIST are the arguments that the prefix command takes. DOCSTRING is the documentation string and is optional. These arguments can optionally be followed by keyword-value pairs. Each key has to be a keyword symbol, either ‘:class’ or a keyword argument supported by the constructor of that class. The ‘transient-prefix’ class is used if the class is not specified explicitly. GROUPs add key bindings for infix and suffix commands and specify how these bindings are presented in the popup buffer. At least one GROUP has to be specified. See *note Binding Suffix and Infix Commands::. The BODY is optional. If it is omitted, then ARGLIST is ignored and the function definition becomes: (lambda () (interactive) (transient-setup 'NAME)) If BODY is specified, then it must begin with an ‘interactive’ form that matches ARGLIST, and it must call ‘transient-setup’. It may however call that function only when some condition is satisfied. All transients have a (possibly ‘nil’) value, which is exported when suffix commands are called, so that they can consume that value. For some transients it might be necessary to have a sort of secondary value, called a "scope". Such a scope would usually be set in the command’s ‘interactive’ form and has to be passed to the setup function: (transient-setup 'NAME nil nil :scope SCOPE) For example, the scope of the ‘magit-branch-configure’ transient is the branch whose variables are being configured.  File: transient.info, Node: Binding Suffix and Infix Commands, Next: Defining Suffix and Infix Commands, Prev: Defining Transients, Up: Defining New Commands 5.2 Binding Suffix and Infix Commands ===================================== The macro ‘transient-define-prefix’ is used to define a transient. This defines the actual transient prefix command (see *note Defining Transients::) and adds the transient’s infix and suffix bindings, as described below. Users and third-party packages can add additional bindings using functions such as ‘transient-insert-suffix’ (See *note Modifying Existing Transients::). These functions take a "suffix specification" as one of their arguments, which has the same form as the specifications used in ‘transient-define-prefix’. * Menu: * Group Specifications:: * Suffix Specifications::  File: transient.info, Node: Group Specifications, Next: Suffix Specifications, Up: Binding Suffix and Infix Commands 5.2.1 Group Specifications -------------------------- The suffix and infix commands of a transient are organized in groups. The grouping controls how the descriptions of the suffixes are outlined visually but also makes it possible to set certain properties for a set of suffixes. Several group classes exist, some of which organize suffixes in subgroups. In most cases the class does not have to be specified explicitly, but see *note Group Classes::. Groups are specified in the call to ‘transient-define-prefix’, using vectors. Because groups are represented using vectors, we cannot use square brackets to indicate an optional element and instead use curly brackets to do the latter. Group specifications then have this form: [{LEVEL} {DESCRIPTION} {KEYWORD VALUE}... ELEMENT...] The LEVEL is optional and defaults to 4. See *note Enabling and Disabling Suffixes::. The DESCRIPTION is optional. If present it is used as the heading of the group. The KEYWORD-VALUE pairs are optional. Each keyword has to be a keyword symbol, either ‘:class’ or a keyword argument supported by the constructor of that class. • One of these keywords, ‘:description’, is equivalent to specifying DESCRIPTION at the very beginning of the vector. The recommendation is to use ‘:description’ if some other keyword is also used, for consistency, or DESCRIPTION otherwise, because it looks better. • Likewise ‘:level’ is equivalent to LEVEL. • Other important keywords include the ‘:if...’ keywords. These keywords control whether the group is available in a certain situation. For example, one group of the ‘magit-rebase’ transient uses ‘:if magit-rebase-in-progress-p’, which contains the suffixes that are useful while rebase is already in progress; and another that uses ‘:if-not magit-rebase-in-progress-p’, which contains the suffixes that initiate a rebase. These predicates can also be used on individual suffixes and are only documented once, see *note Predicate Slots::. • Finally the value of ‘:hide’, if non-nil, is a predicate that controls whether the group is hidden by default. The key bindings for suffixes of a hidden group should all use the same prefix key. Pressing that prefix key should temporarily show the group and its suffixes, which assumes that a predicate like this is used: (lambda () (eq (car transient--redisplay-key) ?\C-c)) ; the prefix key shared by all bindings The ELEMENTs are either all subgroups (vectors), or all suffixes (lists) and strings. (At least currently no group type exists that would allow mixing subgroups with commands at the same level, though in principle there is nothing that prevents that.) If the ELEMENTs are not subgroups, then they can be a mixture of lists that specify commands and strings. Strings are inserted verbatim. The empty string can be used to insert gaps between suffixes, which is particularly useful if the suffixes are outlined as a table. The form of suffix specifications is documented in the next node.  File: transient.info, Node: Suffix Specifications, Prev: Group Specifications, Up: Binding Suffix and Infix Commands 5.2.2 Suffix Specifications --------------------------- A transient’s suffix and infix commands are bound when the transient prefix command is defined using ‘transient-define-prefix’, see *note Defining Transients::. The commands are organized into groups, see *note Group Specifications::. Here we describe the form used to bind an individual suffix command. The same form is also used when later binding additional commands using functions such as ‘transient-insert-suffix’, see *note Modifying Existing Transients::. Note that an infix is a special kind of suffix. Depending on context "suffixes" means "suffixes (including infixes)" or "non-infix suffixes". Here it means the former. Suffix specifications have this form: ([LEVEL] [KEY] [DESCRIPTION] COMMAND|ARGUMENT [KEYWORD VALUE]...) LEVEL, KEY and DESCRIPTION can also be specified using the KEYWORDs ‘:level’, ‘:key’ and ‘:description’. If the object that is associated with COMMAND sets these properties, then they do not have to be specified here. You can however specify them here anyway, possibly overriding the object’s values just for the binding inside this transient. • LEVEL is the suffix level, an integer between 1 and 7. See *note Enabling and Disabling Suffixes::. • KEY is the key binding, either a vector or key description string. • DESCRIPTION is the description, either a string or a function that returns a string. The function should be a lambda expression to avoid ambiguity. In some cases a symbol that is bound as a function would also work but to be safe you should use ‘:description’ in that case. The next element is either a command or an argument. This is the only argument that is mandatory in all cases. • COMMAND is a symbol that is bound as a function, which has to be a command. Any command will do; it does not need to have an object associated with it (as would be the case if ‘transient-define-suffix’ or ‘transient-define-infix’ were used to define it). As mentioned above, the object that is associated with a command can be used to set the default for certain values that otherwise have to be set in the suffix specification. Therefore if there is no object, then you have to make sure to specify the KEY and the DESCRIPTION. • The mandatory argument can also be a command-line argument, a string. In that case an anonymous command is defined and bound. Instead of a string, this can also be a list of two strings, in which case the first string is used as the short argument (which can also be specified using ‘:shortarg’) and the second as the long argument (which can also be specified using ‘:argument’). Only the long argument is displayed in the popup buffer. See ‘transient-detect-key-conflicts’ for how the short argument may be used. Unless the class is specified explicitly, the appropriate class is guessed based on the long argument. If the argument ends with "=​" (e.g. "–format=") then ‘transient-option’ is used, otherwise ‘transient-switch’. Finally, details can be specified using optional KEYWORD-VALUE pairs. Each keyword has to be a keyword symbol, either ‘:class’ or a keyword argument supported by the constructor of that class. See *note Suffix Slots::.  File: transient.info, Node: Defining Suffix and Infix Commands, Next: Using Infix Arguments, Prev: Binding Suffix and Infix Commands, Up: Defining New Commands 5.3 Defining Suffix and Infix Commands ====================================== Note that an infix is a special kind of suffix. Depending on context "suffixes" means "suffixes (including infixes)" or "non-infix suffixes". -- Macro: transient-define-suffix name arglist [docstring] [keyword value]... body... This macro defines NAME as a transient suffix command. ARGLIST are the arguments that the command takes. DOCSTRING is the documentation string and is optional. These arguments can optionally be followed by keyword-value pairs. Each keyword has to be a keyword symbol, either ‘:class’ or a keyword argument supported by the constructor of that class. The ‘transient-suffix’ class is used if the class is not specified explicitly. The BODY must begin with an ‘interactive’ form that matches ARGLIST. The infix arguments are usually accessed by using ‘transient-args’ inside ‘interactive’. -- Macro: transient-define-infix name arglist [docstring] [keyword value]... This macro defines NAME as a transient infix command. ARGLIST is always ignored (but mandatory never-the-less) and reserved for future use. DOCSTRING is the documentation string and is optional. The keyword-value pairs are mandatory. All transient infix commands are ‘equal’ to each other (but not ‘eq’), so it is meaningless to define an infix command without also setting at least ‘:class’ and one other keyword (which it is depends on the used class, usually ‘:argument’ or ‘:variable’). Each keyword has to be a keyword symbol, either ‘:class’ or a keyword argument supported by the constructor of that class. The ‘transient-switch’ class is used if the class is not specified explicitly. The function definition is always: (lambda () (interactive) (let ((obj (transient-suffix-object))) (transient-infix-set obj (transient-infix-read obj))) (transient--show)) ‘transient-infix-read’ and ‘transient-infix-set’ are generic functions. Different infix commands behave differently because the concrete methods are different for different infix command classes. In rare cases the above command function might not be suitable, even if you define your own infix command class. In that case you have to use ‘transient-suffix-command’ to define the infix command and use ‘t’ as the value of the ‘:transient’ keyword. -- Macro: transient-define-argument name arglist [docstring] [keyword value]... This macro defines NAME as a transient infix command. This is an alias for ‘transient-define-infix’. Only use this alias to define an infix command that actually sets an infix argument. To define an infix command that, for example, sets a variable, use ‘transient-define-infix’ instead.  File: transient.info, Node: Using Infix Arguments, Next: Transient State, Prev: Defining Suffix and Infix Commands, Up: Defining New Commands 5.4 Using Infix Arguments ========================= The function and the variables described below allow suffix commands to access the value of the transient from which they were invoked; which is the value of its infix arguments. These variables are set when the user invokes a suffix command that exits the transient, but before actually calling the command. When returning to the command-loop after calling the suffix command, the arguments are reset to ‘nil’ (which causes the function to return ‘nil’ too). Like for Emacs’ prefix arguments it is advisable, but not mandatory, to access the infix arguments inside the command’s ‘interactive’ form. The preferred way of doing that is to call the ‘transient-args’ function, which for infix arguments serves about the same purpose as ‘prefix-arg’ serves for prefix arguments. -- Function: transient-args &optional prefix This function returns the value of the transient prefix command PREFIX. If the current command was invoked from the transient prefix command PREFIX, then it returns the active infix arguments. If the current command was not invoked from PREFIX, then it returns the set, saved or default value for PREFIX. -- Variable: transient-current-suffixes The suffixes of the transient from which this suffix command was invoked. This is a list of objects. Usually it is sufficient to instead use the function ‘transient-args’, which returns a list of values. In complex cases it might be necessary to use this variable instead, i.e. if you need access to information beside the value. -- Variable: transient-current-prefix The transient from which this suffix command was invoked. The returned value is a ‘transient-prefix’ object, which holds information associated with the transient prefix command. -- Variable: transient-current-command The transient from which this suffix command was invoked. The returned value is a symbol, the transient prefix command.  File: transient.info, Node: Transient State, Prev: Using Infix Arguments, Up: Defining New Commands 5.5 Transient State =================== Invoking a transient prefix command "activates" the respective transient, i.e. it puts a transient keymap into effect, which binds the transient’s infix and suffix commands. The default behavior while a transient is active is as follows: • Invoking an infix command does not affect the transient state; the transient remains active. • Invoking a (non-infix) suffix command "deactivates" the transient state by removing the transient keymap and performing some additional cleanup. • Invoking a command that is bound in a keymap other than the transient keymap is disallowed and trying to do so results in a warning. This does not "deactivate" the transient. But these are just the defaults. Whether a certain command deactivates or "exits" the transient is configurable. There is more than one way in which a command can be "transient" or "non-transient"; the exact behavior is implemented by calling a so-called "pre-command" function. Whether non-suffix commands are allowed to be called is configurable per transient. • The transient-ness of suffix commands (including infix commands) is controlled by the value of their ‘transient’ slot, which can be set either when defining the command or when adding a binding to a transient while defining the respective transient prefix command. Valid values are booleans and the pre-commands described below. • ‘t’ is equivalent to ‘transient--do-stay’. • ‘nil’ is equivalent to ‘transient--do-exit’. • If ‘transient’ is unbound (and that is actually the default for non-infix suffixes) then the value of the prefix’s ‘transient-suffix’ slot is used instead. The default value of that slot is ‘nil’, so the suffix’s ‘transient’ slot being unbound is essentially equivalent to it being ‘nil’. • A suffix command can be a prefix command itself, i.e. a "sub-prefix". While a sub-prefix is active we nearly always want ‘C-g’ to take the user back to the "super-prefix". However in rare cases this may not be desirable, and that makes the following complication necessary: For ‘transient-suffix’ objects the ‘transient’ slot is unbound. We can ignore that for the most part because, as stated above, ‘nil’ and the slot being unbound are equivalent, and mean "do exit". That isn’t actually true for suffixes that are sub-prefixes though. For such suffixes unbound means "do exit but allow going back", which is the default, while ‘nil’ means "do exit permanently", which requires that slot to be explicitly set to that value. • The transient-ness of certain built-in suffix commands is specified using ‘transient-predicate-map’. This is a special keymap, which binds commands to pre-commands (as opposed to keys to commands) and takes precedence over the ‘transient’ slot. The available pre-command functions are documented below. They are called by ‘transient--pre-command’, a function on ‘pre-command-hook’ and the value that they return determines whether the transient is exited. To do so the value of one of the constants ‘transient--exit’ or ‘transient--stay’ is used (that way we don’t have to remember if ‘t’ means "exit" or "stay"). Additionally these functions may change the value of ‘this-command’ (which explains why they have to be called using ‘pre-command-hook’), call ‘transient-export’, ‘transient--stack-zap’ or ‘transient--stack-push’; and set the values of ‘transient--exitp’, ‘transient--helpp’ or ‘transient--editp’. 5.5.1 Pre-commands for Infixes ------------------------------ The default for infixes is ‘transient--do-stay’. This is also the only function that makes sense for infixes. -- Function: transient--do-stay Call the command without exporting variables and stay transient. 5.5.2 Pre-commands for Suffixes ------------------------------- The default for suffixes is ‘transient--do-exit’. -- Function: transient--do-exit Call the command after exporting variables and exit the transient. -- Function: transient--do-call Call the command after exporting variables and stay transient. -- Function: transient--do-replace Call the transient prefix command, replacing the active transient. This is used for suffixes that are prefixes themselves, i.e. for sub-prefixes. 5.5.3 Pre-commands for Non-Suffixes ----------------------------------- The default for non-suffixes, i.e commands that are bound in other keymaps beside the transient keymap, is ‘transient--do-warn’. Silently ignoring the user-error is also an option, though probably not a good one. If you want to let the user invoke non-suffix commands, then use ‘transient--do-stay’ as the value of the prefix’s ‘transient-non-suffix’ slot. -- Function: transient--do-warn Call ‘transient-undefined’ and stay transient. -- Function: transient--do-noop Call ‘transient-noop’ and stay transient. 5.5.4 Special Pre-Commands -------------------------- -- Function: transient--do-quit-one If active, quit help or edit mode, else exit the active transient. This is used when the user pressed ‘C-g’. -- Function: transient--do-quit-all Exit all transients without saving the transient stack. This is used when the user pressed ‘C-q’. -- Function: transient--do-suspend Suspend the active transient, saving the transient stack. This is used when the user pressed ‘C-z’.  File: transient.info, Node: Classes and Methods, Next: Related Abstractions and Packages, Prev: Defining New Commands, Up: Top 6 Classes and Methods ********************* Transient uses classes and generic functions to make it possible to define new types of suffix commands that are similar to existing types, but behave differently in some aspects. It does the same for groups and prefix commands, though at least for prefix commands that *currently* appears to be less important. Every prefix, infix and suffix command is associated with an object, which holds information that controls certain aspects of its behavior. This happens in two ways. • Associating a command with a certain class gives the command a type. This makes it possible to use generic functions to do certain things that have to be done differently depending on what type of command it acts on. That in turn makes it possible for third-parties to add new types without having to convince the maintainer of Transient that that new type is important enough to justify adding a special case to a dozen or so functions. • Associating a command with an object makes it possible to easily store information that is specific to that particular command. Two commands may have the same type, but obviously their key bindings and descriptions still have to be different, for example. The values of some slots are functions. The ‘reader’ slot for example holds a function that is used to read a new value for an infix command. The values of such slots are regular functions. Generic functions are used when a function should do something different based on the type of the command, i.e. when all commands of a certain type should behave the same way but different from the behavior for other types. Object slots that hold a regular function as value are used when the task that they perform is likely to differ even between different commands of the same type. * Menu: * Group Classes:: * Group Methods:: * Prefix Classes:: * Suffix Classes:: * Suffix Methods:: * Prefix Slots:: * Suffix Slots:: * Predicate Slots::  File: transient.info, Node: Group Classes, Next: Group Methods, Up: Classes and Methods 6.1 Group Classes ================= The type of a group can be specified using the ‘:class’ property at the beginning of the class specification, e.g. ‘[:class transient-columns ...]’ in a call to ‘transient-define-prefix’. • The abstract ‘transient-child’ class is the base class of both ‘transient-group’ (and therefore all groups) as well as of ‘transient-suffix’ (and therefore all suffix and infix commands). This class exists because the elements (aka "children") of certain groups can be other groups instead of suffix and infix commands. • The abstract ‘transient-group’ class is the superclass of all other group classes. • The ‘transient-column’ class is the simplest group. This is the default "flat" group. If the class is not specified explicitly and the first element is not a vector (i.e. not a group), then this class is used. This class displays each element on a separate line. • The ‘transient-row’ class displays all elements on a single line. • The ‘transient-columns’ class displays commands organized in columns. Direct elements have to be groups whose elements have to be commands or strings. Each subgroup represents a column. This class takes care of inserting the subgroups’ elements. This is the default "nested" group. If the class is not specified explicitly and the first element is a vector (i.e. a group), then this class is used. • The ‘transient-subgroups’ class wraps other groups. Direct elements have to be groups whose elements have to be commands or strings. This group inserts an empty line between subgroups. The subgroups themselves are responsible for displaying their elements.  File: transient.info, Node: Group Methods, Next: Prefix Classes, Prev: Group Classes, Up: Classes and Methods 6.2 Group Methods ================= -- Function: transient--insert-group group This generic function formats the group and its elements and inserts the result into the current buffer, which is a temporary buffer. The contents of that buffer are later inserted into the popup buffer. Functions that are called by this function may need to operate in the buffer from which the transient was called. To do so they can temporarily make the ‘transient--source-buffer’ the current buffer.  File: transient.info, Node: Prefix Classes, Next: Suffix Classes, Prev: Group Methods, Up: Classes and Methods 6.3 Prefix Classes ================== Currently the ‘transient-prefix’ class is being used for all prefix commands and there is only a single generic function that can be specialized based on the class of a prefix command. -- Function: transient--history-init obj This generic function is called while setting up the transient and is responsible for initializing the ‘history’ slot. This is the transient-wide history; many individual infixes also have a history of their own. The default (and currently only) method extracts the value from the global variable ‘transient-history’. A transient prefix command’s object is stored in the ‘transient--prefix’ property of the command symbol. While a transient is active, a clone of that object is stored in the variable ‘transient--prefix’. A clone is used because some changes that are made to the active transient’s object should not affect later invocations.  File: transient.info, Node: Suffix Classes, Next: Suffix Methods, Prev: Prefix Classes, Up: Classes and Methods 6.4 Suffix Classes ================== • All suffix and infix classes derive from ‘transient-suffix’, which in turn derives from ‘transient-child’, from which ‘transient-group’ also derives (see *note Group Classes::). • All infix classes derive from the abstract ‘transient-infix’ class, which in turn derives from the ‘transient-suffix’ class. Infixes are a special type of suffixes. The primary difference is that infixes always use the ‘transient--do-stay’ pre-command, while non-infix suffixes use a variety of pre-commands (see *note Transient State::). Doing that is most easily achieved by using this class, though theoretically it would be possible to define an infix class that does not do so. If you do that then you get to implement many methods. Also, infixes and non-infix suffixes are usually defined using different macros (see *note Defining Suffix and Infix Commands::). • Classes used for infix commands that represent arguments should be derived from the abstract ‘transient-argument’ class. • The ‘transient-switch’ class (or a derived class) is used for infix arguments that represent command-line switches (arguments that do not take a value). • The ‘transient-option’ class (or a derived class) is used for infix arguments that represent command-line options (arguments that do take a value). • The ‘transient-switches’ class can be used for a set of mutually exclusive command-line switches. • The ‘transient-files’ class can be used for a "–" argument that indicates that all remaining arguments are files. • Classes used for infix commands that represent variables should derived from the abstract ‘transient-variables’ class. Magit defines additional classes, which can serve as examples for the fancy things you can do without modifying Transient. Some of these classes will likely get generalized and added to Transient. For now they are very much subject to change and not documented.  File: transient.info, Node: Suffix Methods, Next: Prefix Slots, Prev: Suffix Classes, Up: Classes and Methods 6.5 Suffix Methods ================== To get information about the methods implementing these generic functions use ‘describe-function’. * Menu: * Suffix Value Methods:: * Suffix Format Methods::  File: transient.info, Node: Suffix Value Methods, Next: Suffix Format Methods, Up: Suffix Methods 6.5.1 Suffix Value Methods -------------------------- -- Function: transient-init-value obj This generic function sets the initial value of the object OBJ. This function is called for all suffix commands, but unless a concrete method is implemented this falls through to the default implementation, which is a noop. In other words this usually only does something for infix commands, but note that this is not implemented for the abstract class ‘transient-infix’, so if your class derives from that directly, then you must implement a method. -- Function: transient-infix-read obj This generic function determines the new value of the infix object OBJ. This function merely determines the value; ‘transient-infix-set’ is used to actually store the new value in the object. For most infix classes this is done by reading a value from the user using the reader specified by the ‘reader’ slot (using the ‘transient-infix-value’ method described below). For some infix classes the value is changed without reading anything in the minibuffer, i.e. the mere act of invoking the infix command determines what the new value should be, based on the previous value. -- Function: transient-prompt obj This generic function returns the prompt to be used to read infix object OBJ’s value. -- Function: transient-infix-set obj value This generic function sets the value of infix object OBJ to VALUE. -- Function: transient-infix-value obj This generic function returns the value of the suffix object OBJ. This function is called by ‘transient-args’ (which see), meaning this function is how the value of a transient is determined so that the invoked suffix command can use it. Currently most values are strings, but that is not set in stone. ‘nil’ is not a value, it means "no value". Usually only infixes have a value, but see the method for ‘transient-suffix’. -- Function: transient-init-scope obj This generic function sets the scope of the suffix object OBJ. The scope is actually a property of the transient prefix, not of individual suffixes. However it is possible to invoke a suffix command directly instead of from a transient. In that case, if the suffix expects a scope, then it has to determine that itself and store it in its ‘scope’ slot. This function is called for all suffix commands, but unless a concrete method is implemented this falls through to the default implementation, which is a noop.  File: transient.info, Node: Suffix Format Methods, Prev: Suffix Value Methods, Up: Suffix Methods 6.5.2 Suffix Format Methods --------------------------- -- Function: transient-format obj This generic function formats and returns OBJ for display. When this function is called, then the current buffer is some temporary buffer. If you need the buffer from which the prefix command was invoked to be current, then do so by temporarily making ‘transient--source-buffer’ current. -- Function: transient-format-key obj This generic function formats OBJ’s ‘key’ for display and returns the result. -- Function: transient-format-description obj This generic function formats OBJ’s ‘description’ for display and returns the result. -- Function: transient-format-value obj This generic function formats OBJ’s value for display and returns the result. -- Function: transient-show-help obj Show help for the prefix, infix or suffix command represented by OBJ. For prefixes, show the info manual, if that is specified using the ‘info-manual’ slot. Otherwise show the manpage if that is specified using the ‘man-page’ slot. Otherwise show the command’s doc string. For suffixes, show the command’s doc string. For infixes, show the manpage if that is specified. Otherwise show the command’s doc string.  File: transient.info, Node: Prefix Slots, Next: Suffix Slots, Prev: Suffix Methods, Up: Classes and Methods 6.6 Prefix Slots ================ • ‘man-page’ or ‘info-manual’ can be used to specify the documentation for the prefix and its suffixes. The command ‘transient-help’ uses the method ‘transient-show-help’ (which see) to lookup and use these values. • ‘history-key’ If multiple prefix commands should share a single value, then this slot has to be set to the same value for all of them. You probably don’t want that. • ‘transient-suffix’ and ‘transient-non-suffix’ play a part when determining whether the currently active transient prefix command remains active/transient when a suffix or abitrary non-suffix command is invoked. See *note Transient State::. • ‘incompatible’ A list of lists. Each sub-list specifies a set of mutually exclusive arguments. Enabling one of these arguments causes the others to be disabled. • ‘scope’ For some transients it might be necessary to have a sort of secondary value, called a "scope". See ‘transient-define-prefix’. 6.6.1 Internal Prefix Slots --------------------------- These slots are mostly intended for internal use. They should not be set in calls to ‘transient-define-prefix’. • ‘prototype’ When a transient prefix command is invoked, then a clone of that object is stored in the global variable ‘transient--prefix’ and the prototype is stored in the clone’s ‘prototype’ slot. • ‘command’ The command, a symbol. Each transient prefix command consists of a command, which is stored in a symbol’s function slot and an object, which is stored in the ‘transient--prefix’ property of the same symbol. • ‘level’ The level of the prefix commands. The suffix commands whose layer is equal or lower are displayed. See *note Enabling and Disabling Suffixes::. • ‘value’ The likely outdated value of the prefix. Instead of accessing this slot directly you should use the function ‘transient-get-value’, which is guaranteed to return the up-to-date value. • ‘history’ and ‘history-pos’ are used to keep track of historic values. Unless you implement your own ‘transient-infix-read’ method you should not have to deal with these slots.  File: transient.info, Node: Suffix Slots, Next: Predicate Slots, Prev: Prefix Slots, Up: Classes and Methods 6.7 Suffix Slots ================ Here we document most of the slots that are only available for suffix objects. Some slots are shared by suffix and group objects, they are documented in *note Predicate Slots::. Also see *note Suffix Classes::. 6.7.1 Slots of ‘transient-suffix’ --------------------------------- • ‘key’ The key, a key vector or a key description string. • ‘command’ The command, a symbol. • ‘transient’ Whether to stay transient. See *note Transient State::. • ‘format’ The format used to display the suffix in the popup buffer. It must contain the following %-placeholders: • ‘%k’ For the key. • ‘%d’ For the description. • ‘%v’ For the infix value. Non-infix suffixes don’t have a value. • ‘description’ The description, either a string or a function that is called with no argument and returns a string. 6.7.2 Slots of ‘transient-infix’ -------------------------------- Some of these slots are only meaningful for some of the subclasses. They are defined here anyway to allow sharing certain methods. • ‘argument’ The long argument, e.g. ‘--verbose’. • ‘shortarg’ The short argument, e.g. ‘-v’. • ‘multi-value’ For options, whether the option can have multiple values. If non-nil, then default to use ‘completing-read-multiple’. • ‘allow-empty’ For options, whether the empty string is a valid value. • ‘history-key’ The key used to store the history. This defaults to the command name. This is useful when multiple infixes should share the same history because their values are of the same kind. • ‘reader’ The function used to read the value of an infix. Not used for switches. The function takes three arguments, PROMPT, INITIAL-INPUT and HISTORY, and must return a string. • ‘prompt’ The prompt used when reading the value, either a string or a function that takes the object as the only argument and which returns a prompt string. • ‘choices’ A list of valid values. How exactly that is used depends on the class of the object. 6.7.3 Slots of ‘transient-variable’ ----------------------------------- • ‘variable’ The variable. 6.7.4 Slots of ‘transient-switches’ ----------------------------------- • ‘argument-format’ The display format. Must contain ‘%s’, one of the ‘choices’ is substituted for that. E.g. ‘--%s-order’. • ‘argument-regexp’ The regexp used to match any one of the switches. E.g. ‘\\(--\\(topo\\|author-date\\|date\\)-order\\)’.  File: transient.info, Node: Predicate Slots, Prev: Suffix Slots, Up: Classes and Methods 6.8 Predicate Slots =================== Suffix and group objects share some predicate slots that control whether a group or suffix should be available depending on some state. Only one of these slots can be used at the same time. It is undefined what happens if you use more than one. • ‘if’ Enable if predicate returns non-nil. • ‘if-not’ Enable if predicate returns nil. • ‘if-non-nil’ Enable if variable’s value is non-nil. • ‘if-nil’ Enable if variable’s value is nil. • ‘if-mode’ Enable if major-mode matches value. • ‘if-not-mode’ Enable if major-mode does not match value. • ‘if-derived’ Enable if major-mode derives from value. • ‘if-not-derived’ Enable if major-mode does not derive from value. One more slot is shared between group and suffix classes, ‘level’. Like the slots documented above, it is a predicate, but it is used for a different purpose. The value has to be an integer between 1 and 7. ‘level’ controls whether a suffix or a group should be available depending on user preference. See *note Enabling and Disabling Suffixes::.  File: transient.info, Node: Related Abstractions and Packages, Next: FAQ, Prev: Classes and Methods, Up: Top 7 Related Abstractions and Packages *********************************** * Menu: * Comparison With Prefix Keys and Prefix Arguments:: * Comparison With Other Packages::  File: transient.info, Node: Comparison With Prefix Keys and Prefix Arguments, Next: Comparison With Other Packages, Up: Related Abstractions and Packages 7.1 Comparison With Prefix Keys and Prefix Arguments ==================================================== While transient commands were inspired by regular prefix keys and prefix arguments, they are also quite different and much more complex. The following diagrams illustrate some of the differences. • ‘(c)’ represents a return to the command loop. • ‘(+)’ represents the user’s choice to press one key or another. • ‘{WORD}’ are possible behaviors. • ‘{NUMBER}’ is a footnote. 7.1.1 Regular Prefix Commands ----------------------------- See *note (elisp)Prefix Keys::. ,--> command1 --> (c) | (c)-(+)-> prefix command or key --+--> command2 --> (c) | `--> command3 --> (c) 7.1.2 Regular Prefix Arguments ------------------------------ See *note (elisp)Prefix Command Arguments::. ,----------------------------------, | | v | (c)-(+)---> prefix argument command --(c)-(+)-> any command --> (c) | ^ | | | | `-- sets or changes --, ,-- maybe used --' | | | | v | | prefix argument state | ^ | | | `-------- discards --------' 7.1.3 Transients ---------------- (∩`-´)⊃━☆゚.*・。゚ This diagram ignores the infix value and external state: (c) | ,- {stay} ------<-,-<------------<-,-<---, (+) | | | | | | | | | | | ,--> infix1 --| | | | | | | | | | | |--> infix2 --| | | v v | | | | prefix -(c)-(+)-> infix3 --' ^ | | | | |---------------> suffix1 -->--| | | | | |---------------> suffix2 ----{1}------> {exit} --> (c) | | |---------------> suffix3 -------------> {exit} --> (c) | | `--> any command --{2}-> {warn} -->--| | | |--> {noop} -->--| | | |--> {call} -->--' | `------------------> {exit} --> (c) This diagram takes the infix value into account to an extend, while still ignoring external state: (c) | ,- {stay} ------<-,-<------------<-,-<---, (+) | | | | | | | | | | | ,--> infix1 --| | | | | | | | | | | | ,--> infix2 --| | | v v | | | | | prefix -(c)-(+)-> infix3 --' | | | | ^ | | | | | |---------------> suffix1 -->--| | | | ^ | | | | | | | |---------------> suffix2 ----{1}------> {exit} --> (c) | | ^ | | | | | | v | | | | | |---------------> suffix3 -------------> {exit} --> (c) | | ^ | | | sets | | v | | maybe | | | | used | | | | | | | | | infix --' | | | `---> value | | | ^ | | | | | | | hides | | | | | | | `--------------------------<---| | | | `--> any command --{2}-> {warn} -->--| | | | | |--> {noop} -->--| | | | | |--> {call} -->--' ^ | | `------------------> {exit} --> (c) This diagram provides more information about the infix value and also takes external state into account. ,----sets--- "anything" | v ,---------> external | state | | | | initialized | ☉‿⚆ sets from | | | maybe | ,----------' used | | | (c) | | v | ,- {stay} --|---<-,-<------|-----<-,-<---, (+) | | | | | | | | | | v | | | | | | ,--> infix1 --| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | v | | | | | | ,--> infix2 --| | | | | | | | ^ | | | | v v | | | | | | | prefix -(c)-(+)-> infix3 --' | | | | | ^ | ^ | | | | v | | |---------------> suffix1 -->--| | | | | ^ | | | | | | | v | | |---------------> suffix2 ----{1}------> {exit} --> (c) | | | ^ | | | | | | | | | v | | | | v | | |---------------> suffix3 -------------> {exit} --> (c) | | | ^ | | | sets | | | v | | initialized maybe | | | | from used | | | | | | | | | | `-- infix ---' | | | `---> value -----------------------------> persistent | ^ ^ | | across | | | | | invocations -, | hides | | | | | | `----------------------------------------------' | | | | | `--------------------------<---| | | | `--> any command --{2}-> {warn} -->--| | | | | |--> {noop} -->--| | | | | |--> {call} -->--' ^ | | `------------------> {exit} --> (c) • ‘{1}’ Transients can be configured to be exited when a suffix command is invoked. The default is to do so for all suffixes except for those that are common to all transients and which are used to perform tasks such as providing help and saving the value of the infix arguments for future invocations. The behavior can also be specified for individual suffix commands and may even depend on state. • ‘{2}’ Transients can be configured to allow the user to invoke non-suffix commands. The default is to not allow that and instead warn the user. Despite already being rather complex, even the last diagram leaves out many details. Most importantly it implies that the decision whether to remain transient is made later than it actually is made (for the most part a function on ‘pre-command-hook’ is responsible). But such implementation details are of little relevance to users and are covered elsewhere.  File: transient.info, Node: Comparison With Other Packages, Prev: Comparison With Prefix Keys and Prefix Arguments, Up: Related Abstractions and Packages 7.2 Comparison With Other Packages ================================== 7.2.1 Magit-Popup ----------------- Transient is the successor to Magit-Popup (see *note (magit-popup)Top::). One major difference between these two implementations of the same ideas is that while Transient uses transient keymaps and embraces the command-loop, Magit-Popup implemented an inferior mechanism that does not use transient keymaps and that instead of using the command-loop implements a naive alternative based on ‘read-char’. Magit-Popup does not use classes and generic functions and defining a new command type is near impossible as it involves adding hard-coded special-cases to many functions. Because of that only a single new type was added, which was not already part of Magit-Popup’s initial release. A lot of things are hard-coded in Magit-Popup. One random example is that the key bindings for switches must begin with "-" and those for options must begin with "=". 7.2.2 Hydra ----------- Hydra (see ) is another package that provides features similar to those of Transient. Both packages use transient keymaps to make a set of commands temporarily available and show the available commands in a popup buffer. A Hydra "body" is equivalent to a Transient "prefix" and a Hydra "head" is equivalent to a Transient "suffix". Hydra has no equivalent of a Transient "infix". Both hydras and transients can be used as simple command dispatchers. Used like this they are similar to regular prefix commands and prefix keys, except that the available commands are shown in the popup buffer. (Another package that does this is ‘which-key’. It does so automatically for any incomplete key sequence. The advantage of that approach is that no additional work is necessary; the disadvantage is that the available commands are not organized semantically.) Both Hydra and Transient provide features that go beyond simple command dispatchers: • Invoking a command from a hydra does not necessarily exit the hydra. That makes it possible to invoke the same command again, but using a shorter key sequence (i.e. the key that was used to enter the hydra does not have to be pressed again). Transient supports that too, but for now this feature is not a focus and the interface is a bit more complicated. A very basic example using the current interface: (transient-define-prefix outline-navigate () :transient-suffix 'transient--do-stay :transient-non-suffix 'transient--do-warn [("p" "previous visible heading" outline-previous-visible-heading) ("n" "next visible heading" outline-next-visible-heading)]) • Transient supports infix arguments; values that are set by infix commands and then consumed by the invoked suffix command(s). To my knowledge, Hydra does not support that. Both packages make it possible to specify how exactly the available commands are outlined: • With Hydra this is often done using an explicit format string, which gives authors a lot of flexibility and makes it possible to do fancy things. The downside of this is that it becomes harder for a user to add additional commands to an existing hydra and to change key bindings. • Transient allows the author of a transient to organize the commands into groups and the use of generic functions allows authors of transients to control exactly how a certain command type is displayed. However while Transient supports giving sections a heading it does not currently support giving the displayed information more structure by, for example, using box-drawing characters. That could be implemented by defining a new group class, which lets the author specify a format string. It should be possible to implement that without modifying any existing code, but it does not currently exist.  File: transient.info, Node: FAQ, Next: Keystroke Index, Prev: Related Abstractions and Packages, Up: Top Appendix A FAQ ************** A.1 Can I control how the popup buffer is displayed? ==================================================== Yes, see ‘transient-display-buffer-action’ in *note Other Options::. A.2 Why did some of the key bindings change? ============================================ You may have noticed that the bindings for some of the common commands do *not* have the prefix ‘C-x’ and that furthermore some of these commands are grayed out while others are not. That unfortunately is a bit confusing if the section of common commands is not shown permanently, making the following explanation necessary. The purpose of usually hiding that section but showing it after the user pressed the respective prefix key is to conserve space and not overwhelm users with too much noise, while allowing the user to quickly list common bindings on demand. That however should not keep us from using the best possible key bindings. The bindings that do use a prefix do so to avoid wasting too many non-prefix bindings, keeping them available for use in individual transients. The bindings that do not use a prefix and that are *not* grayed out are very important bindings that are *always* available, even when invoking the "common command key prefix" or *any other* transient-specific prefix. The non-prefix keys that *are* grayed out however, are not available when any incomplete prefix key sequence is active. They do not use the "common command key prefix" because it is likely that users want to invoke them several times in a row and e.g. ‘M-p M-p M-p’ is much more convenient than ‘C-x M-p C-x M-p C-x M-p’. You may also have noticed that the "Set" command is bound to ‘C-x s’, while Magit-Popup used to bind ‘C-c C-c’ instead. I have seen several users praise the latter binding (sic), so I did not change it willy-nilly. The reason that I changed it is that using different prefix keys for different common commands, would have made the temporary display of the common commands even more confusing, i.e. after pressing ‘C-c’ all the ‘C-x ...’ bindings would be grayed out. Using a single prefix for common commands key means that all other potential prefix keys can be used for transient-specific commands *without* the section of common commands also popping up. ‘C-c’ in particular is a prefix that I want to (and already do) use for Magit, and also using that for a common command would prevent me from doing so. (Also see the next question.) A.3 Why does ‘q’ not quit popups anymore? ========================================= I agree that ‘q’ is a good binding for commands that quit something. This includes quitting whatever transient is currently active, but it also includes quitting whatever it is that some specific transient is controlling. The transient ‘magit-blame’ for example binds ‘q’ to the command that turns ‘magit-blame-mode’ off. So I had to decide if ‘q’ should quit the active transient (like Magit-Popup used to) or whether ‘C-g’ should do that instead, so that ‘q’ could be bound in individual transient to whatever commands make sense for them. Because all other letters are already reserved for use by individual transients, I have decided to no longer make an exception for ‘q’. If you want to get ‘q’’s old binding back then you can do so. Doing that is a bit more complicated than changing a single key binding, so I have implemented a function, ‘transient-bind-q-to-quit’ that makes the necessary changes. See its doc string for more information.  File: transient.info, Node: Keystroke Index, Next: Command Index, Prev: FAQ, Up: Top Appendix B Keystroke Index ************************** [index] * Menu: * C-g: Aborting and Resuming Transients. (line 25) * C-g <1>: Aborting and Resuming Transients. (line 26) * C-h: Getting Help for Suffix Commands. (line 10) * C-q: Aborting and Resuming Transients. (line 36) * C-x C-s: Saving Values. (line 25) * C-x l: Enabling and Disabling Suffixes. (line 49) * C-x s: Saving Values. (line 20) * C-x t: Common Suffix Commands. (line 16) * C-z: Aborting and Resuming Transients. (line 42) * M-n: Using History. (line 16) * M-p: Using History. (line 11) * M-x transient-resume: Aborting and Resuming Transients. (line 55)  File: transient.info, Node: Command Index, Next: Function Index, Prev: Keystroke Index, Up: Top Appendix C Command Index ************************ [index] * Menu: * transient-help: Getting Help for Suffix Commands. (line 10) * transient-history-next: Using History. (line 16) * transient-history-prev: Using History. (line 11) * transient-quit-all: Aborting and Resuming Transients. (line 36) * transient-quit-one: Aborting and Resuming Transients. (line 26) * transient-quit-seq: Aborting and Resuming Transients. (line 25) * transient-resume: Aborting and Resuming Transients. (line 55) * transient-save: Saving Values. (line 25) * transient-scroll-down arg: Other Commands. (line 18) * transient-scroll-up arg: Other Commands. (line 12) * transient-set: Saving Values. (line 20) * transient-set-level: Enabling and Disabling Suffixes. (line 49) * transient-suspend: Aborting and Resuming Transients. (line 42) * transient-toggle-common: Common Suffix Commands. (line 16)  File: transient.info, Node: Function Index, Next: Variable Index, Prev: Command Index, Up: Top Appendix D Function Index ************************* [index] * Menu: * transient--do-call: Transient State. (line 98) * transient--do-exit: Transient State. (line 94) * transient--do-noop: Transient State. (line 125) * transient--do-quit-all: Transient State. (line 138) * transient--do-quit-one: Transient State. (line 132) * transient--do-replace: Transient State. (line 102) * transient--do-stay: Transient State. (line 85) * transient--do-suspend: Transient State. (line 144) * transient--do-warn: Transient State. (line 121) * transient--history-init: Prefix Classes. (line 10) * transient--insert-group: Group Methods. (line 6) * transient-append-suffix: Modifying Existing Transients. (line 47) * transient-args: Using Infix Arguments. (line 22) * transient-define-argument: Defining Suffix and Infix Commands. (line 63) * transient-define-infix: Defining Suffix and Infix Commands. (line 27) * transient-define-prefix: Defining Transients. (line 13) * transient-define-suffix: Defining Suffix and Infix Commands. (line 9) * transient-format: Suffix Format Methods. (line 6) * transient-format-description: Suffix Format Methods. (line 20) * transient-format-key: Suffix Format Methods. (line 15) * transient-format-value: Suffix Format Methods. (line 25) * transient-get-suffix: Modifying Existing Transients. (line 60) * transient-infix-read: Suffix Value Methods. (line 17) * transient-infix-set: Suffix Value Methods. (line 39) * transient-infix-value: Suffix Value Methods. (line 43) * transient-init-scope: Suffix Value Methods. (line 57) * transient-init-value: Suffix Value Methods. (line 6) * transient-insert-suffix: Modifying Existing Transients. (line 42) * transient-prompt: Suffix Value Methods. (line 34) * transient-remove-suffix: Modifying Existing Transients. (line 56) * transient-replace-suffix: Modifying Existing Transients. (line 51) * transient-scroll-down: Other Commands. (line 18) * transient-scroll-up: Other Commands. (line 12) * transient-show-help: Suffix Format Methods. (line 30) * transient-suffix-put: Modifying Existing Transients. (line 65)  File: transient.info, Node: Variable Index, Prev: Function Index, Up: Top Appendix E Variable Index ************************* [index] * Menu: * transient-current-command: Using Infix Arguments. (line 47) * transient-current-prefix: Using Infix Arguments. (line 41) * transient-current-suffixes: Using Infix Arguments. (line 32) * transient-default-level: Enabling and Disabling Suffixes. (line 38) * transient-detect-key-conflicts: Other Options. (line 137) * transient-display-buffer-action: Other Options. (line 46) * transient-enable-popup-navigation: Other Options. (line 28) * transient-force-fixed-pitch: Other Options. (line 151) * transient-highlight-mismatched-keys: Other Options. (line 96) * transient-history-file: Using History. (line 33) * transient-history-limit: Using History. (line 38) * transient-levels-file: Enabling and Disabling Suffixes. (line 44) * transient-mode-line-format: Other Options. (line 71) * transient-read-with-initial-input: Other Options. (line 88) * transient-show-common-commands: Common Suffix Commands. (line 23) * transient-show-popup: Other Options. (line 6) * transient-substitute-key-function: Other Options. (line 115) * transient-values-file: Saving Values. (line 30)  Tag Table: Node: Top751 Node: Introduction3673 Node: Usage9460 Node: Invoking Transients9794 Node: Aborting and Resuming Transients10826 Node: Common Suffix Commands13485 Node: Saving Values15239 Ref: Saving Values-Footnote-116497 Node: Using History16767 Node: Getting Help for Suffix Commands18308 Node: Enabling and Disabling Suffixes19701 Node: Other Commands22991 Node: Other Options23947 Node: Modifying Existing Transients31071 Node: Defining New Commands34473 Node: Defining Transients34809 Node: Binding Suffix and Infix Commands37240 Node: Group Specifications38094 Node: Suffix Specifications41426 Node: Defining Suffix and Infix Commands45001 Node: Using Infix Arguments48199 Node: Transient State50419 Node: Classes and Methods56292 Node: Group Classes58506 Node: Group Methods60422 Node: Prefix Classes61068 Node: Suffix Classes62160 Node: Suffix Methods64404 Node: Suffix Value Methods64725 Node: Suffix Format Methods67485 Node: Prefix Slots68937 Node: Suffix Slots71412 Node: Predicate Slots74263 Node: Related Abstractions and Packages75511 Node: Comparison With Prefix Keys and Prefix Arguments75798 Node: Comparison With Other Packages86110 Node: FAQ90300 Node: Keystroke Index94034 Node: Command Index95668 Node: Function Index97455 Node: Variable Index101612  End Tag Table  Local Variables: coding: utf-8 End: