7.9 Cursor Position Information
Here are commands to get information about the size and position of parts of the buffer, and to count words and lines.
M-x what-line
Display the line number of point.
M-x line-number-mode``M-x column-number-mode
Toggle automatic display of the current line number or column number. See Optional Mode Line Features. If you want to have a line number displayed before each line, see Customization of Display.
M-=
Display the number of lines, words, and characters that are present in
the region ( count-words-region
). See The Mark and the Region, for information
about the region.
M-x count-words
Display the number of lines, words, and characters that are present in the buffer. If the region is active (see The Mark and the Region), display the numbers for the region instead.
C-x =
Display the character code of character after point, character position of
point, and column of point ( what-cursor-position
).
M-x hl-line-mode
Enable or disable highlighting of the current line. See Displaying the Cursor.
M-x size-indication-mode
Toggle automatic display of the size of the buffer. See Optional Mode Line Features.
M-x what-line
displays the current line number in the echo
area. This command is usually redundant because the current line
number is shown in the mode line (see The Mode Line). However, if you
narrow the buffer, the mode line shows the line number relative to
the accessible portion (see Narrowing). By contrast,
what-line
displays both the line number relative to the
narrowed region and the line number relative to the whole buffer.
M-=
( count-words-region
) displays a message reporting
the number of lines, words, and characters in the region
(see The Mark and the Region, for an explanation of the region). With a prefix
argument, C-u M-=
, the command displays a count for the entire
buffer.
The command M-x count-words
does the same job, but with a
different calling convention. It displays a count for the region if
the region is active, and for the buffer otherwise.
The command C-x =
( what-cursor-position
) shows
information about the current cursor position and the buffer contents
at that position. It displays a line in the echo area that looks like
this:
Char: c (99, #o143, #x63) point=28062 of 36168 (78%) column=53
After ‘ Char:
’, this shows the character in the buffer at point.
The text inside the parenthesis shows the corresponding decimal, octal
and hex character codes; for more information about how C-x =
displays character information, see Introduction to International Character Sets. After
‘ point=
’ is the position of point as a character count (the first
character in the buffer is position 1, the second character is
position 2, and so on). The number after that is the total number of
characters in the buffer, and the number in parenthesis expresses the
position as a percentage of the total. After ‘ column=
’ is the
horizontal position of point, in columns counting from the left edge
of the window.
If the user option what-cursor-show-names
is non- nil
,
the name of the character, as defined by the Unicode Character
Database, is shown as well. The part in parentheses would then become:
(99, #o143, #x63, LATIN SMALL LETTER C)
If the buffer has been narrowed, making some of the text at the
beginning and the end temporarily inaccessible, C-x =
displays
additional text describing the currently accessible range. For
example, it might display this:
Char: C (67, #o103, #x43) point=252 of 889 (28%) <231-599> column=0
where the two extra numbers give the smallest and largest character position that point is allowed to assume. The characters between those two positions are the accessible ones. See Narrowing.
Related, but different feature is display-line-numbers-mode
(see Customization of Display).