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This documents the "extra" features for Dired Mode for GNU Emacs that are provided by the file `dired-x.el'.
Concept Index Function Index Key Index Variable Index
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This documents the extra features for Dired Mode for GNU Emacs. It is derived from version 1.191 of Sebastian Kremer's `dired-x.el'.
In adopting this `dired-x.el' to GNU Emacs v19 some material that has
been incorporated into `dired.el' and `dired-aux.el' of the GNU Emacs
19 distribution has been removed and some material was modified for agreement
with the functions in `dired.el' and `dired-aux.el'. For example,
the code using gmhist history functions was replaced with code using
the mini-buffer history now built into GNU Emacs. Finally, a few other
features have been added and a few more functions have been bound to keys.
1.1 Features 1.2 Technical Details
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Some features provided by Dired Extra
`dired-x.el' binds some functions to keys in Dired Mode (see section Key Index) and also binds C-x C-j and C-x 4 C-j globally to
dired-jump (see section 9. Miscellaneous Commands). It may also bind C-x
C-f and C-x 4 C-f to dired-x-find-file and
dired-x-find-file-other-window, respectively (see section 8.1 Find File At Point).
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When loaded this code redefines the following functions of GNU Emacs from `dired.el'
dired-clean-up-after-deletion
dired-find-buffer-nocreate
dired-initial-position
dired-up-directory
and the following functions from `dired-aux.el'
dired-add-entry
dired-read-shell-command
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This manual describes the Dired features provided by the file `dired-x.el'. To take advantage of these features, you must load the file and (optionally) set some variables.
In your `.emacs' file in your home directory, or in the system-wide initialization file `default.el' in the `site-lisp' directory, put
(add-hook 'dired-load-hook
(lambda ()
(load "dired-x")
;; Set dired-x global variables here. For example:
;; (setq dired-guess-shell-gnutar "gtar")
;; (setq dired-x-hands-off-my-keys nil)
))
(add-hook 'dired-mode-hook
(lambda ()
;; Set dired-x buffer-local variables here. For example:
;; (setq dired-omit-files-p t)
))
|
This will load `dired-x.el' when Dired is first invoked (for example, when you first type C-x d).
2.1 Optional Installation Dired Jump 2.2 Optional Installation File At Point
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In order to have dired-jump and dired-jump-other-window
(see section 9. Miscellaneous Commands) work before dired and
dired-x have been properly loaded the user should set-up an autoload
for these functions. In your `.emacs' file put
;;; Autoload `dired-jump' and `dired-jump-other-window'. ;;; We autoload from FILE dired.el. This will then load dired-x.el ;;; and hence define `dired-jump' and `dired-jump-other-window'. (define-key global-map "\C-x\C-j" 'dired-jump) (define-key global-map "\C-x4\C-j" 'dired-jump-other-window) (autoload (quote dired-jump) "dired" "\ Jump to Dired buffer corresponding to current buffer. If in a file, Dired the current directory and move to file's line. If in Dired already, pop up a level and goto old directory's line. In case the proper Dired file line cannot be found, refresh the Dired buffer and try again." t nil) (autoload (quote dired-jump-other-window) "dired" "\ Like \\[dired-jump] (dired-jump) but in other window." t nil) |
Note that in recent releases of GNU Emacs 19 (i.e., 19.25 or later) the file
`../lisp/loaddefs.el' of the Emacs distribution already contains the
proper auto-loading for dired-jump so you need only put
(define-key global-map "\C-x\C-j" 'dired-jump) |
in your `.emacs' file in order to have C-x C-j work
before dired is loaded.
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If you choose to have `dired-x.el' bind dired-x-find-file over
find-file (see section 8.1 Find File At Point), then you will need to set
dired-x-hands-off-my-keys and make a call to the function
dired-x-bind-find-file in the dired-load-hook:
(add-hook 'dired-load-hook
(lambda ()
(load "dired-x")
;; Bind dired-x-find-file.
(setq dired-x-hands-off-my-keys nil)
;; Make sure our binding preference is invoked.
(dired-x-bind-find-file)
))
|
Alternatively, you can set the variable before `dired-x.el' is loaded
(add-hook 'dired-load-hook
(lambda ()
;; Bind dired-x-find-file.
(setq dired-x-hands-off-my-keys nil)
(load "dired-x")
))
|
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Omitting a file means removing it from the directory listing. Omitting is useful for keeping Dired buffers free of "uninteresting" files (for instance, auto-save, auxiliary, backup, and revision control files) so that the user can concentrate on the interesting files. Like hidden files, omitted files are never seen by Dired. Omitting differs from hiding in several respects:
dired-omit-toggle) Toggle between displaying and omitting
"uninteresting" files. With a prefix argument, just mark
the files, but don't actually omit them.
In order to make Dired Omit work you first need to load `dired-x.el'
inside dired-load-hook (see section 2. Installation) and then set
dired-omit-files-p in some way (see section 3.1 Omitting Variables).
3.1 Omitting Variables 3.2 Examples of Omitting Various File Types 3.3 Some Technical Details of Omitting
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The following variables can be used to customize omitting.
dired-omit-files-p
Default: nil
If non-nil, "uninteresting" files are not listed.
Uninteresting files are those whose files whose names match regexp
dired-omit-files, plus those ending with extensions in
dired-omit-extensions. M-o (dired-omit-toggle)
toggles its value, which is buffer-local. Put
(setq dired-omit-files-p t) |
inside your dired-mode-hook to have omitting initially turned on in
every Dired buffer (see section 2. Installation). You can then use M-o to
unomit in that buffer.
To enable omitting automatically only in certain directories one can use Dired Local Variables and put
Local Variables: dired-omit-files-p: t End: |
into a file `.dired' (the default value of
dired-local-variables-file) in that directory (see section 4. Local Variables for Dired Directories).
dired-omit-here-always
This is an interactive function that creates a local variables file exactly
like the example above (if it does not already exist) in the file
dired-local-variables-file in the current directory and then refreshes
the directory listing (see section 4. Local Variables for Dired Directories).
dired-omit-files
Default: "^#\\|\\.$"
Files whose names match this buffer-local regexp will not be displayed.
This only has effect when dired-omit-files-p's value is t.
The default value omits the special directories `.' and `..' and autosave files (plus other files ending in `.') (see section 3.2 Examples of Omitting Various File Types).
dired-omit-extensions
Default: The elements of completion-ignored-extensions,
dired-latex-unclean-extensions, dired-bibtex-unclean-extensions
and dired-texinfo-unclean-extensions.
If non-nil, a list of extensions (strings) to omit from Dired listings.
Its format is the same as that of completion-ignored-extensions.
dired-omit-localp
Default: no-dir
The localp argument dired-omit-expunge passes to
dired-get-filename. If it is no-dir, omitting is much faster,
but you can only match against the non-directory part of the file name. Set it
to nil if you need to match the whole file name or t to match the
file name relative to the buffer's top-level directory.
dired-omit-marker-char
Temporary marker used by Dired to implement omitting. Should never be used as marker by the user or other packages. There is one exception to this rule: by adding
(setq dired-mark-keys "\C-o") ;; i.e., the value of dired-omit-marker-char ;; (which is not defined yet) |
to your `~/.emacs', you can bind the C-o key to insert a C-o marker, thus causing these files to be omitted in addition to the usually omitted files. Unfortunately the files you omitted manually this way will show up again after reverting the buffer, unlike the others.
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(setq dired-omit-files
(concat dired-omit-files "\\|^RCS$\\|,v$"))
|
in the dired-load-hook (see section 2. Installation). This assumes
dired-omit-localp has its default value of no-dir to make the
^-anchored matches work. As a slower alternative, with
dired-omit-localp set to nil, you can use / instead of
^ in the regexp.
tib, the bibliography program for use with TeX and
LaTeX, and you
want to omit the `INDEX' and the `*-t.tex' files, then put
(setq dired-omit-files
(concat dired-omit-files "\\|^INDEX$\\|-t\\.tex$"))
|
in the dired-load-hook (see section 2. Installation).
(setq dired-omit-files
(concat dired-omit-files "\\|^\\..+$"))
|
in the dired-load-hook (see section 2. Installation).
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Loading `dired-x.el' will install Dired Omit by putting
dired-omit-expunge on your dired-after-readin-hook, and will
call dired-extra-startup, which in turn calls dired-omit-startup
in your dired-mode-hook.
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When Dired visits a directory, it looks for a file whose name is the value of
variable dired-local-variables-file (default: `.dired'). If such
a file is found, Dired will temporarily insert it into the Dired buffer and
run hack-local-variables.
For example, if the user puts
Local Variables: dired-actual-switches: "-lat" dired-omit-files-p: t End: |
into a file called `.dired' in a directory then when that directory is viewed it will be
You can set dired-local-variables-file to nil to suppress this.
The value of dired-enable-local-variables controls if and how these
local variables are read. This variable exists so that if may override the
default value of enable-local-variables.
Please see the GNU Emacs Manual to learn more about local variables. See section `Local Variables in Files' in The GNU Emacs Manual.
The following variables affect Dired Local Variables
dired-local-variables-file
".dired"
If non-nil, file name for local variables for Dired. If Dired finds a
file with that name in the current directory, it will temporarily insert it
into the Dired buffer and run hack-local-variables.
dired-enable-local-variables
t
Controls the use of local-variables lists in Dired. The value can be t,
nil, or something else. A value of t means local-variables
lists are obeyed in the dired-local-variables-file; nil means
they are ignored; anything else means query. This variable temporarily
overrides the value of enable-local-variables when the Dired Local
Variables are hacked.
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Based upon the name of a file, Dired tries to guess what shell command you might want to apply to it. For example, if you have point on a file named `foo.tar' and you press !, Dired will guess you want to `tar xvf' it and suggest that as the default shell command.
The default is mentioned in brackets and you can type M-p to get the default into the minibuffer and then edit it, e.g., to change `tar xvf' to `tar tvf'. If there are several commands for a given file, e.g., `xtex' and `dvips' for a `.dvi' file, you can type M-p several times to see each of the matching commands.
Dired only tries to guess a command for a single file, never for a list of marked files.
dired-guess-shell-alist-default
nil to turn guessing off.
The elements of dired-guess-shell-alist-user (defined by the
user) will override these rules.
dired-guess-shell-alist-user
nil, a user-defined alist of file regexps and their suggested
commands. These rules take precedence over the predefined rules in the
variable dired-guess-shell-alist-default (to which they are prepended)
when dired-do-shell-command is run).
Each element of the alist looks like
(regexp command...) |
where each command can either be a string or a lisp expression that evaluates to a string. If several commands are given, all of them will temporarily be pushed onto the history.
You can set this variable in your `~/.emacs'. For example, to add rules for `.foo' and `.bar' file extensions, write
(setq dired-guess-shell-alist-user
(list
(list "\\.foo$" "foo-command");; fixed rule
;; possibly more rules...
(list "\\.bar$";; rule with condition test
'(if condition
"bar-command-1"
"bar-command-2"))))
|
This will override any predefined rules for the same extensions.
dired-guess-shell-gnutar
nil
If non-nil, this is the name of the GNU Tar executable (e.g.,
`tar' or `gnutar'). GNU Tar's `z' switch is used for
compressed tar files.
If you don't have GNU tar, set this to nil: a pipe using `zcat' is
then used.
dired-guess-shell-gzip-quiet
t
A non-nil value means that `-q' is passed to gzip
overriding a verbose option in the GZIP environment variable.
dired-guess-shell-znew-switches nil
nil
A string of switches passed to znew. An example is
`-K' which will make znew keep a `.Z' file when it is
smaller than the `.gz' file.
dired-shell-command-history nil
History list for commands that read dired-shell commands.
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Using Virtual Dired means putting a buffer with Dired-like contents in Dired mode. The files described by the buffer contents need not actually exist. This is useful if you want to peruse an `ls -lR' output file, for example one you got from an FTP server. You can use all motion commands usually available in Dired. You can also use it to save a Dired buffer in a file and resume it in a later session.
Type M-x dired-virtual to put the current buffer into virtual
Dired mode. You will be prompted for the top level directory of this
buffer, with a default value guessed from the buffer contents. To
convert the virtual to a real Dired buffer again, type g (which
calls dired-virtual-revert) in the virtual Dired buffer and
answer `y'. You don't have to do this, though: you can relist
single subdirectories using l (dired-do-redisplay) on the subdirectory
headerline, leaving the buffer in virtual Dired mode all the time.
The function `dired-virtual-mode' is specially designed to turn on
virtual Dired mode from the auto-mode-alist. To edit all
`*.dired' files automatically in virtual Dired mode, put this into your
`~/.emacs':
(setq auto-mode-alist (cons '("[^/]\\.dired$" . dired-virtual-mode)
auto-mode-alist))
|
The regexp is a bit more complicated than usual to exclude `.dired' local-variable files.
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dired-do-find-marked-files) Find all marked files at once displaying
them simultaneously. If optional noselect is non-nil then just
find the
files but do not select. If you want to keep the Dired buffer displayed, type
C-x 2 first. If you want just the marked files displayed and nothing
else, type C-x 1 first.
The current window is split across all files marked, as evenly as possible.
Remaining lines go to the bottom-most window. The number of files that can be
displayed this way is restricted by the height of the current window and the
variable window-min-height.
dired-mark-extension
When called from Lisp, extension may also be a list of extensions and an optional argument marker-char specifies the marker used.
dired-flag-extension
7.1 Advanced Cleaning Functions 7.2 Advanced Cleaning Variables 7.3 Special Marking Function
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dired-clean-patch
dired-patch-unclean-extensions.
dired-clean-tex
dired-tex-unclean-extensions
dired-texinfo-unclean-extensions
dired-latex-unclean-extensions
dired-bibtex-unclean-extensions
dired-very-clean-tex
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Variables used by the above cleaning commands (and in the default value for
variable dired-omit-extensions, see section 3.1 Omitting Variables)
dired-patch-unclean-extensions
(".rej" ".orig")
List of extensions of dispensable files created by the `patch' program.
dired-tex-unclean-extensions
(".toc" ".log" ".aux")
List of extensions of dispensable files created by TeX.
dired-texinfo-unclean-extensions
(".cp" ".cps" ".fn" ".fns" ".ky" ".kys"
".pg" ".pgs" ".tp" ".tps" ".vr" ".vrs")
List of extensions of dispensable files created by `texinfo'.
dired-latex-unclean-extensions
(".idx" ".lof" ".lot" ".glo")
List of extensions of dispensable files created by LaTeX.
dired-bibtex-unclean-extensions
(".blg" ".bbl")
List of extensions of dispensable files created by BibTeX.
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dired-mark-sexp) Mark files for which predicate returns
non-nil. With a prefix argument, unflag those files instead.
The predicate is a lisp expression that can refer to the following symbols:
inode
s
mode
nlink
uid
gid
size
time
name
sym
""
For example, use
(equal 0 size) |
To find out all not yet compiled Emacs lisp files in a directory, Dired all `.el' files in the lisp directory using the wildcard `*.el'. Then use M-( with
(not (file-exists-p (concat name "c"))) |
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An Emacs buffer can have but one working directory, stored in the
buffer-local variable default-directory. A Dired buffer may have
several subdirectories inserted, but it still has only one working
directory: that of the top-level Dired directory in that buffer. For
some commands it is appropriate that they use the current Dired
directory instead of default-directory, e.g., find-file and
compile.
A general mechanism is provided for special handling of the working directory in special major modes:
default-directory-alist
((dired-mode . (dired-current-directory)))
Alist of major modes and their notion of default-directory, as a
lisp expression to evaluate. A resulting value of nil is ignored
in favor of default-directory.
default-directory
default-directory, but knows about the
special cases in variable default-directory-alist.
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`dired-x' provides a method of visiting or editing a file mentioned in the buffer you are viewing (e.g., a mail buffer, a news article, a `README' file, etc.) or to test if that file exists. You can then modify this in the minibuffer after snatching the file name.
When installed `dired-x' will substitute dired-x-find-file for
find-file (normally bound to C-x C-f) and
dired-x-find-file-other-window for find-file-other-window
(normally bound to C-x 4 C-f).
In order to use this feature, you will need to set
dired-x-hands-off-my-keys to nil inside dired-load-hook
(see section 2.2 Optional Installation File At Point).
dired-x-find-file
dired-x-find-file behaves exactly like find-file (normally bound
to C-x C-f) unless a prefix argument is passed to the function in which
case it will use the file name at point as a guess for the file to visit.
For example, if the buffer you were reading contained the words
Available via anonymous ftp in /roebling.poly.edu:/pub/lisp/crypt++.el.gz |
then you could move your cursor to the line containing the ftp address and type C-u C-x C-f (the C-u is a universal argument). The minibuffer would read
Find file: /roebling.poly.edu:/pub/lisp/crypt++.el.gz |
with the point after the last /. If you hit RET, emacs will visit
the file at that address. This also works with files on your own computer.
dired-x-find-file-other-window
dired-x-find-file-other-window behaves exactly like
find-file-other-window (normally bound to C-x 4 C-f) unless a
prefix argument is used. See dired-x-find-file for more information.
dired-x-hands-off-my-keys
t, then it means that `dired-x' should not bind
dired-x-find-file over find-file on keyboard. Similarly, it
should not bind dired-x-find-file-other-window over
find-file-other-window. If you change this variable after
`dired-x.el' is loaded then do M-x dired-x-bind-find-file. The
default value of this variable is t; by default, the binding is not
done. See See section 2.2 Optional Installation File At Point.
dired-x-bind-find-file
dired-x-hands-off-my-keys to determine if
dired-x-find-file should be bound over find-file and
dired-x-find-file-other-window bound over
find-file-other-window. See See section 2.2 Optional Installation File At Point.
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Miscellaneous features not fitting anywhere else:
dired-find-subdir
nil
If non-nil, Dired does not make a new buffer for a directory if it can
be found (perhaps as subdirectory) in some existing Dired buffer.
If there are several Dired buffers for a directory, the most recently used is chosen.
Dired avoids switching to the current buffer, so that if you have a normal and a wildcard buffer for the same directory, C-x d RET will toggle between those two.
dired-goto-file) Go to the line of a file (or directory).
dired-goto-subdir) Go to the header line of an inserted directory.
This command reads its argument, with completion derived from the names of the
inserted subdirectories.
dired-copy-filename-as-kill) The w command puts the names
of the marked (or next N) files into the kill ring, as if you had
killed them with C-w. With a zero prefix argument N=0, use the
complete pathname of each file. With a raw (just C-u) prefix argument,
use the relative pathname of each marked file. As a special case, if no
prefix argument is given and point is on a directory headerline, it
gives you the name of that directory, without looking for marked files.
The list of names is also stored onto the variable dired-marked-files
for use, e.g., in the M-: (eval-expression) command.
As this command also displays what was pushed onto the kill ring, you can use it to display the list of currently marked files in the echo area (unless you happen to be on a subdirectory headerline).
You can then feed the file name to other Emacs commands with C-y. For example, say you want to rename a file with a long name to a slightly different name. First type w to push the old name onto the kill ring. Then type R to rename it and use C-y inside R's minibuffer prompt to insert the old name at a convenient place.
dired-do-toggle) Toggle marks. That is, currently marked
files become unmarked and vice versa. Files marked with other flags
(such as `D') are not affected. The special directories `.'
and `..' are never toggled.
dired-smart-shell-command
shell-command, but in the current Dired directory.
Bound to M-! in Dired buffers.
dired-jump
dired-jump-other-window
dired-jump, but to other window.
These functions can be autoloaded so they work even though `dired-x.el' has not been loaded yet (see section 2.1 Optional Installation Dired Jump).
If the variable dired-bind-jump is nil, dired-jump will not be
bound to C-x C-j and dired-jump-other-window will not be bound to
C-x 4 C-j.
dired-vm
dired-bind-vm is t. Run VM on this file (assumed
to be a UNIX mail folder).
If you give this command a prefix argument, it will visit the folder read-only. This only works in VM 5, not VM 4.
If the variable dired-vm-read-only-folders is t,
dired-vm will
visit all folders read-only. If it is neither nil nor t, e.g.,
the symbol if-file-read-only, only files not writable by you are
visited read-only. This is the recommended value if you run VM 5.
If the variable dired-bind-vm is t, dired-vm will be bound to
V. Otherwise, dired-bind-rmail will be bound.
dired-rmail
dired-bind-vm is nil. Run Rmail on this
file (assumed to be mail folder in Rmail/BABYL format).
dired-info
If the variable dired-bind-info is nil, dired-info will
not be bound to I.
dired-man
nroff
format).
If the variable dired-bind-man is nil, dired-man will not
be bound to N.
dired-do-relative-symlink
foo -> ../bar/foo |
not absolute ones like
foo -> /ugly/path/that/may/change/any/day/bar/foo |
dired-do-relative-symlink-regexp
dired-do-rename-regexp and dired-do-relsymlink for more
info.
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If you encounter a bug in this package, wish to suggest an enhancement, or want to make a smart remark, then type
M-x dired-x-submit-report |
to set up an outgoing mail buffer, with the proper address to the `dired-x.el' maintainer automatically inserted in the `To:' field. This command also inserts information that the Dired X maintainer can use to recreate your exact setup, making it easier to verify your bug or social maladjustment.
Lawrence R. Dodd
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C F G I M N T V W Y |
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C F G I M N T V W Y |
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1. Introduction
2. Installation
3. Omitting Files in Dired
4. Local Variables for Dired Directories
5. Shell Command Guessing
6. Virtual Dired
7. Advanced Mark Commands
8. Multiple Dired Directories and Non-Dired Commands
9. Miscellaneous Commands
10. Bugs
Concept Index
Function Index
Key Index
Variable Index
| [Top] | [Contents] | [Index] | [ ? ] |
| Button | Name | Go to | From 1.2.3 go to |
|---|---|---|---|
| [ < ] | Back | previous section in reading order | 1.2.2 |
| [ > ] | Forward | next section in reading order | 1.2.4 |
| [ << ] | FastBack | previous or up-and-previous section | 1.1 |
| [ Up ] | Up | up section | 1.2 |
| [ >> ] | FastForward | next or up-and-next section | 1.3 |
| [Top] | Top | cover (top) of document | |
| [Contents] | Contents | table of contents | |
| [Index] | Index | concept index | |
| [ ? ] | About | this page |