re-search-forward
Function
The re-search-forward
function is very like the
search-forward
function. (See section The search-forward
Function.)
re-search-forward
searches for a regular expression. If the
search is successful, it leaves point immediately after the last
character in the target. If the search is backwards, it leaves point
just before the first character in the target. You may tell
re-search-forward
to return t
for true. (Moving point
is therefore a `side effect'.)
Like search-forward
, the re-search-forward
function takes
four arguments:
nil
as the third argument causes the function to
signal an error (and print a message) when the search fails; any other
value causes it to return nil
if the search fails and t
if the search succeeds.
re-search-forward
to search backwards.
The template for re-search-forward
looks like this:
(re-search-forward "regular-expression" limit-of-search what-to-do-if-search-fails repeat-count)
The second, third, and fourth arguments are optional. However, if you want to pass a value to either or both of the last two arguments, you must also pass a value to all the preceding arguments. Otherwise, the Lisp interpreter will mistake which argument you are passing the value to.
In the forward-sentence
function, the regular expression will be
the value of the variable sentence-end
, namely:
"[.?!][]\"')}]*\\($\\| \\| \\)[ ]*"
The limit of the search will be the end of the paragraph (since a
sentence cannot go beyond a paragraph). If the search fails, the
function will return nil
; and the repeat count will be provided
by the argument to the forward-sentence
function.
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