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kill-region is the usual subroutine for killing text. Any
command that calls this function is a "kill command" (and should
probably have `kill' in its name). kill-region puts the
newly killed text in a new element at the beginning of the kill ring or
adds it to the most recent element. It determines automatically (using
last-command) whether the previous command was a kill command,
and if so appends the killed text to the most recent entry.
nil.
In an interactive call, start and end are point and the mark.
If the buffer or text is read-only, kill-region modifies the kill
ring just the same, then signals an error without modifying the buffer.
This is convenient because it lets the user use a series of kill
commands to copy text from a read-only buffer into the kill ring.
nil, kill-region does not signal an
error if the buffer or text is read-only. Instead, it simply returns,
updating the kill ring but not changing the buffer.
nil. It also indicates the extent
of the text copied by moving the cursor momentarily, or by displaying a
message in the echo area.
The command does not set this-command to kill-region, so a
subsequent kill command does not append to the same kill ring entry.
Don't call copy-region-as-kill in Lisp programs unless you aim to
support Emacs 18. For newer Emacs versions, it is better to use
kill-new or kill-append instead. See section 32.8.4 Low-Level Kill Ring.
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