Next: Tags Search, Previous: Select Tags Table, Up: Tags
The most important thing that a tags table enables you to do is to find the definition of a specific tag.
find-tag
).
find-tag-regexp
).
find-tag-other-window
).
find-tag-other-frame
).
M-. (find-tag
) prompts for a tag name and jumps to
its source definition. It works by searching through the tags table
for that tag's file and approximate character position, visiting that
file, and searching for the tag definition at ever-increasing
distances away from the recorded approximate position.
When entering the tag argument to M-., the usual minibuffer completion commands can be used (see Completion), with the tag names in the selected tags table as completion candidates. If you specify an empty argument, the balanced expression in the buffer before or around point is the default argument. See Expressions.
You don't need to give M-. the full name of the tag; a part
will do. M-. finds tags which contain that argument as a
substring. However, it prefers an exact match to a substring match.
To find other tags that match the same substring, give find-tag
a numeric argument, as in C-u M-. or M-0 M-.; this does
not read a tag name, but continues searching the tags table's text for
another tag containing the same substring last used.
Like most commands that can switch buffers, find-tag
has a
variant that displays the new buffer in another window, and one that
makes a new frame for it. The former is C-x 4 .
(find-tag-other-window
), and the latter is C-x 5 .
(find-tag-other-frame
).
To move back to previous tag definitions, use C-u - M-.; more generally, M-. with a negative numeric argument. Similarly, C-x 4 . with a negative argument finds the previous tag location in another window.
As well as going back to places you've found tags recently, you can
go back to places from where you found them, using M-*
(pop-tag-mark
). Thus you can find and examine the definition
of something with M-. and then return to where you were with
M-*.
Both C-u - M-. and M-* allow you to retrace your steps to
a depth determined by the variable find-tag-marker-ring-length
.
The command C-M-. (find-tag-regexp
) visits the tags that
match a specified regular expression. It is just like M-. except
that it does regexp matching instead of substring matching.