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+This is transient.info, produced by makeinfo version 6.5 from
+transient.texi.
+
+ Copyright (C) 2018-2020 Jonas Bernoulli <jonas@bernoul.li>
+
+ 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 <jonas@bernoul.li>
+
+ 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 <key>’ can be used
+to show the documentation for the infix or suffix command that ‘<key>’
+is bound to (see *note Getting Help for Suffix Commands::) and infixes
+and suffixes can be removed from the transient using ‘C-x l <key>’.
+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 <key>’ 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 ‘<key>’ shows information about the suffix command that
+ ‘<key>’ normally is bound to (instead of invoking it). Pressing
+ ‘C-h’ a second time shows information about the _prefix_ command.
+
+ After typing ‘<key>’ 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:
+
+ • ‘<up>’ moves the cursor to the previous suffix. ‘<down>’
+ moves the cursor to the next suffix. ‘RET’ invokes the suffix
+ the cursor is on.
+
+ • ‘<mouse-1>’ 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 <https://github.com/abo-abo/hydra>) 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
+**************************
+
+
+* 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
+************************
+
+
+* 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
+*************************
+
+
+* 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
+*************************
+
+
+* 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:
Copyright 2019--2024 Marius PETER