2002-01-07 Michael Kifer <kifer@cs.stonybrook.edu>
[bpt/emacs.git] / man / dired.texi
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6bf7aab6 1@c This is part of the Emacs manual.
739a80b3 2@c Copyright (C) 1985,86,87,93,94,95,97,2000,2001
6ca0edfe 3@c Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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4@c See file emacs.texi for copying conditions.
5@node Dired, Calendar/Diary, Rmail, Top
6@chapter Dired, the Directory Editor
7@cindex Dired
a33b10b5 8@cindex file management
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9
10 Dired makes an Emacs buffer containing a listing of a directory, and
11optionally some of its subdirectories as well. You can use the normal
12Emacs commands to move around in this buffer, and special Dired commands
13to operate on the files listed.
14
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15 The Dired buffer is ``read-only,'' and inserting text in it is not
16useful, so ordinary printing characters such as @kbd{d} and @kbd{x} are
17used for special Dired commands. Some Dired commands @dfn{mark} or
18@dfn{flag} the @dfn{current file} (that is, the file on the current
19line); other commands operate on the marked files or on the flagged
20files.
21
a8ef67ae 22 The Dired-X package provides various extra features for Dired mode.
5942fb80 23@xref{Dired-X,,,dired-x, Dired Extra Version 2 User's Manual}.
a8ef67ae 24
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25@menu
26* Enter: Dired Enter. How to invoke Dired.
0ec1f115 27* Navigation: Dired Navigation. Special motion commands in the Dired buffer.
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28* Deletion: Dired Deletion. Deleting files with Dired.
29* Flagging Many Files:: Flagging files based on their names.
30* Visit: Dired Visiting. Other file operations through Dired.
31* Marks vs Flags:: Flagging for deletion vs marking.
32* Operating on Files:: How to copy, rename, print, compress, etc.
33 either one file or several files.
34* Shell Commands in Dired:: Running a shell command on the marked files.
35* Transforming File Names:: Using patterns to rename multiple files.
36* Comparison in Dired:: Running `diff' by way of Dired.
37* Subdirectories in Dired:: Adding subdirectories to the Dired buffer.
38* Subdirectory Motion:: Moving across subdirectories, and up and down.
39* Hiding Subdirectories:: Making subdirectories visible or invisible.
40* Updating: Dired Updating. Discarding lines for files of no interest.
41* Find: Dired and Find. Using `find' to choose the files for Dired.
42@end menu
43
44@node Dired Enter
45@section Entering Dired
46
47@findex dired
48@kindex C-x d
49@vindex dired-listing-switches
50 To invoke Dired, do @kbd{C-x d} or @kbd{M-x dired}. The command reads
51a directory name or wildcard file name pattern as a minibuffer argument
52to specify which files to list. Where @code{dired} differs from
53@code{list-directory} is in putting the buffer into Dired mode so that
54the special commands of Dired are available.
55
56 The variable @code{dired-listing-switches} specifies the options to
57give to @code{ls} for listing directory; this string @emph{must} contain
58@samp{-l}. If you use a numeric prefix argument with the @code{dired}
59command, you can specify the @code{ls} switches with the minibuffer
60before you enter the directory specification.
61
62@findex dired-other-window
63@kindex C-x 4 d
64@findex dired-other-frame
65@kindex C-x 5 d
66 To display the Dired buffer in another window rather than in the
67selected window, use @kbd{C-x 4 d} (@code{dired-other-window}) instead
68of @kbd{C-x d}. @kbd{C-x 5 d} (@code{dired-other-frame}) uses a
69separate frame to display the Dired buffer.
70
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71@node Dired Navigation
72@section Navigation in the Dired Buffer
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73
74@kindex C-n @r{(Dired)}
75@kindex C-p @r{(Dired)}
76 All the usual Emacs cursor motion commands are available in Dired
77buffers. Some special-purpose cursor motion commands are also
78provided. The keys @kbd{C-n} and @kbd{C-p} are redefined to put the
79cursor at the beginning of the file name on the line, rather than at the
80beginning of the line.
81
82@kindex SPC @r{(Dired)}
83 For extra convenience, @key{SPC} and @kbd{n} in Dired are equivalent
84to @kbd{C-n}. @kbd{p} is equivalent to @kbd{C-p}. (Moving by lines is
85so common in Dired that it deserves to be easy to type.) @key{DEL}
86(move up and unflag) is often useful simply for moving up.
87
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88 Some additional navigation commands are available when the Dired
89buffer includes several directories. @xref{Subdirectory Motion}.
90
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91@node Dired Deletion
92@section Deleting Files with Dired
93@cindex flagging files (in Dired)
94@cindex deleting files (in Dired)
95
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96 One of the most frequent uses of Dired is to first @dfn{flag} files for
97deletion, then delete the files that were flagged.
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98
99@table @kbd
100@item d
101Flag this file for deletion.
102@item u
103Remove deletion flag on this line.
104@item @key{DEL}
105Move point to previous line and remove the deletion flag on that line.
106@item x
107Delete the files that are flagged for deletion.
108@end table
109
110@kindex d @r{(Dired)}
111@findex dired-flag-file-deletion
112 You can flag a file for deletion by moving to the line describing the
113file and typing @kbd{d} (@code{dired-flag-file-deletion}). The deletion flag is visible as a @samp{D} at
114the beginning of the line. This command moves point to the next line,
115so that repeated @kbd{d} commands flag successive files. A numeric
116argument serves as a repeat count.
a8ef67ae 117
db1433e5 118@cindex recursive deletion
4bce911c 119@vindex dired-recursive-deletes
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120 The variable @code{dired-recursive-deletes} controls whether the
121delete command will delete non-empty directories (including their
122contents). The default is to delete only empty directories.
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123
124@kindex u @r{(Dired deletion)}
125@kindex DEL @r{(Dired)}
126 The files are flagged for deletion rather than deleted immediately to
127reduce the danger of deleting a file accidentally. Until you direct
5942fb80 128Dired to delete the flagged files, you can remove deletion flags using
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129the commands @kbd{u} and @key{DEL}. @kbd{u} (@code{dired-unmark}) works
130just like @kbd{d}, but removes flags rather than making flags.
131@key{DEL} (@code{dired-unmark-backward}) moves upward, removing flags;
132it is like @kbd{u} with argument @minus{}1.
133
134@kindex x @r{(Dired)}
5942fb80 135@findex dired-do-flagged-delete
6bf7aab6 136@cindex expunging (Dired)
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137 To delete the flagged files, type @kbd{x} (@code{dired-do-flagged-delete}).
138(This is also known as @dfn{expunging}.)
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139This command first displays a list of all the file names flagged for
140deletion, and requests confirmation with @kbd{yes}. If you confirm,
141Dired deletes the flagged files, then deletes their lines from the text
142of the Dired buffer. The shortened Dired buffer remains selected.
143
144 If you answer @kbd{no} or quit with @kbd{C-g} when asked to confirm, you
145return immediately to Dired, with the deletion flags still present in
146the buffer, and no files actually deleted.
147
148@node Flagging Many Files
149@section Flagging Many Files at Once
a33b10b5 150@cindex flagging many files for deletion (in Dired)
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151
152@table @kbd
153@item #
154Flag all auto-save files (files whose names start and end with @samp{#})
155for deletion (@pxref{Auto Save}).
156
157@item ~
158Flag all backup files (files whose names end with @samp{~}) for deletion
159(@pxref{Backup}).
160
161@item &
162Flag for deletion all files with certain kinds of names, names that
163suggest you could easily create the files again.
164
165@item .@: @r{(Period)}
166Flag excess numeric backup files for deletion. The oldest and newest
167few backup files of any one file are exempt; the middle ones are
168flagged.
169
170@item % d @var{regexp} @key{RET}
171Flag for deletion all files whose names match the regular expression
172@var{regexp}.
173@end table
174
175 The @kbd{#}, @kbd{~}, @kbd{&}, and @kbd{.} commands flag many files for
176deletion, based on their file names. These commands are useful
177precisely because they do not themselves delete any files; you can
178remove the deletion flags from any flagged files that you really wish to
179keep.@refill
180
181@kindex & @r{(Dired)}
182@findex dired-flag-garbage-files
183@vindex dired-garbage-files-regexp
a33b10b5 184@cindex deleting some backup files
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185 @kbd{&} (@code{dired-flag-garbage-files}) flags files whose names
186match the regular expression specified by the variable
187@code{dired-garbage-files-regexp}. By default, this matches certain
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188files produced by @TeX{}, @samp{.bak} files, and the @samp{.orig} and
189@samp{.rej} files produced by @code{patch}.
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190
191@kindex # @r{(Dired)}
6bf7aab6 192@findex dired-flag-auto-save-files
a33b10b5 193@cindex deleting auto-save files
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194 @kbd{#} (@code{dired-flag-auto-save-files}) flags for deletion all
195files whose names look like auto-save files (@pxref{Auto Save})---that
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196is, files whose names begin and end with @samp{#}.
197
198@kindex ~ @r{(Dired)}
199@findex dired-flag-backup-files
200 @kbd{~} (@code{dired-flag-backup-files}) flags for deletion all files
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201whose names say they are backup files (@pxref{Backup})---that is, files
202whose names end in @samp{~}.
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203
204@kindex . @r{(Dired)}
205@vindex dired-kept-versions
206@findex dired-clean-directory
207 @kbd{.} (period, @code{dired-clean-directory}) flags just some of the
208backup files for deletion: all but the oldest few and newest few backups
209of any one file. Normally @code{dired-kept-versions} (@strong{not}
210@code{kept-new-versions}; that applies only when saving) specifies the
211number of newest versions of each file to keep, and
212@code{kept-old-versions} specifies the number of oldest versions to
213keep.
214
215 Period with a positive numeric argument, as in @kbd{C-u 3 .},
216specifies the number of newest versions to keep, overriding
217@code{dired-kept-versions}. A negative numeric argument overrides
218@code{kept-old-versions}, using minus the value of the argument to
219specify the number of oldest versions of each file to keep.
220
221@findex dired-flag-files-regexp
222@kindex % d @r{(Dired)}
223 The @kbd{% d} command flags all files whose names match a specified
224regular expression (@code{dired-flag-files-regexp}). Only the
225non-directory part of the file name is used in matching. You can use
226@samp{^} and @samp{$} to anchor matches. You can exclude subdirectories
227by hiding them (@pxref{Hiding Subdirectories}).
228
229@node Dired Visiting
230@section Visiting Files in Dired
231
232 There are several Dired commands for visiting or examining the files
233listed in the Dired buffer. All of them apply to the current line's
234file; if that file is really a directory, these commands invoke Dired on
235that subdirectory (making a separate Dired buffer).
236
237@table @kbd
238@item f
239@kindex f @r{(Dired)}
240@findex dired-find-file
241Visit the file described on the current line, like typing @kbd{C-x C-f}
242and supplying that file name (@code{dired-find-file}). @xref{Visiting}.
243
244@item @key{RET}
c3149267 245@itemx e
6bf7aab6 246@kindex RET @r{(Dired)}
c3149267 247@kindex e @r{(Dired)}
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248Equivalent to @kbd{f}.
249
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250@item a
251@kindex a @r{(Dired)}
252@findex dired-find-alternate-file
253Like @kbd{f}, but replaces the contents of the Dired buffer with
38458147 254that of an alternate file or directory (@code{dired-find-alternate-file}).
f8a12fe7 255
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256@item o
257@kindex o @r{(Dired)}
258@findex dired-find-file-other-window
259Like @kbd{f}, but uses another window to display the file's buffer
260(@code{dired-find-file-other-window}). The Dired buffer remains visible
261in the first window. This is like using @kbd{C-x 4 C-f} to visit the
262file. @xref{Windows}.
263
264@item C-o
265@kindex C-o @r{(Dired)}
266@findex dired-display-file
267Visit the file described on the current line, and display the buffer in
268another window, but do not select that window (@code{dired-display-file}).
269
270@item Mouse-2
271@findex dired-mouse-find-file-other-window
272Visit the file named by the line you click on
273(@code{dired-mouse-find-file-other-window}). This uses another window
274to display the file, like the @kbd{o} command.
275
276@item v
277@kindex v @r{(Dired)}
278@findex dired-view-file
279View the file described on the current line, using @kbd{M-x view-file}
280(@code{dired-view-file}).
281
282Viewing a file is like visiting it, but is slanted toward moving around
283in the file conveniently and does not allow changing the file.
5942fb80 284@xref{Misc File Ops,View File, Miscellaneous File Operations}.
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285
286@item ^
287@kindex ^ @r{(Dired)}
288@findex dired-up-directory
289Visit the parent directory of the current directory
290(@code{dired-up-directory}). This is more convenient than moving to
291the parent directory's line and typing @kbd{f} there.
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292@end table
293
294@node Marks vs Flags
295@section Dired Marks vs. Flags
296
a33b10b5 297@cindex marking many files (in Dired)
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298 Instead of flagging a file with @samp{D}, you can @dfn{mark} the
299file with some other character (usually @samp{*}). Most Dired
300commands to operate on files use the files marked with @samp{*}, the
301exception being @kbd{x} which deletes the flagged files.
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302
303 Here are some commands for marking with @samp{*}, or for unmarking or
304operating on marks. (@xref{Dired Deletion}, for commands to flag and
305unflag files.)
306
307@table @kbd
308@item m
309@itemx * m
310@kindex m @r{(Dired)}
311@kindex * m @r{(Dired)}
312@findex dired-mark
313Mark the current file with @samp{*} (@code{dired-mark}). With a numeric
314argument @var{n}, mark the next @var{n} files starting with the current
315file. (If @var{n} is negative, mark the previous @minus{}@var{n}
316files.)
317
318@item * *
319@kindex * * @r{(Dired)}
320@findex dired-mark-executables
a33b10b5 321@cindex marking executable files (in Dired)
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322Mark all executable files with @samp{*}
323(@code{dired-mark-executables}). With a numeric argument, unmark all
324those files.
325
326@item * @@
327@kindex * @@ @r{(Dired)}
328@findex dired-mark-symlinks
a33b10b5 329@cindex marking symlinks (in Dired)
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330Mark all symbolic links with @samp{*} (@code{dired-mark-symlinks}).
331With a numeric argument, unmark all those files.
332
333@item * /
334@kindex * / @r{(Dired)}
335@findex dired-mark-directories
a33b10b5 336@cindex marking subdirectories (in Dired)
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337Mark with @samp{*} all files which are actually directories, except for
338@file{.} and @file{..} (@code{dired-mark-directories}). With a numeric
339argument, unmark all those files.
340
341@item * s
342@kindex * s @r{(Dired)}
343@findex dired-mark-subdir-files
344Mark all the files in the current subdirectory, aside from @file{.}
345and @file{..} (@code{dired-mark-subdir-files}).
346
347@item u
348@itemx * u
349@kindex u @r{(Dired)}
350@kindex * u @r{(Dired)}
351@findex dired-unmark
352Remove any mark on this line (@code{dired-unmark}).
353
354@item @key{DEL}
355@itemx * @key{DEL}
356@kindex * DEL @r{(Dired)}
357@findex dired-unmark-backward
a33b10b5 358@cindex unmarking files (in Dired)
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359Move point to previous line and remove any mark on that line
360(@code{dired-unmark-backward}).
361
362@item * !
363@kindex * ! @r{(Dired)}
5942fb80 364@findex dired-unmark-all-marks
6bf7aab6 365Remove all marks from all the files in this Dired buffer
5942fb80 366(@code{dired-unmark-all-marks}).
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367
368@item * ? @var{markchar}
369@kindex * ? @r{(Dired)}
370@findex dired-unmark-all-files
371Remove all marks that use the character @var{markchar}
372(@code{dired-unmark-all-files}). The argument is a single
38458147 373character---do not use @key{RET} to terminate it. See the description
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374of the @kbd{* c} command below, which lets you replace one mark
375character with another.
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376
377With a numeric argument, this command queries about each marked file,
378asking whether to remove its mark. You can answer @kbd{y} meaning yes,
379@kbd{n} meaning no, or @kbd{!} to remove the marks from the remaining
380files without asking about them.
381
382@item * C-n
383@findex dired-next-marked-file
384@kindex * C-n @r{(Dired)}
385Move down to the next marked file (@code{dired-next-marked-file})
386A file is ``marked'' if it has any kind of mark.
387
388@item * C-p
389@findex dired-prev-marked-file
390@kindex * C-p @r{(Dired)}
391Move up to the previous marked file (@code{dired-prev-marked-file})
392
393@item * t
394@kindex * t @r{(Dired)}
395@findex dired-do-toggle
a33b10b5 396@cindex toggling marks (in Dired)
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397Toggle all marks (@code{dired-do-toggle}): files marked with @samp{*}
398become unmarked, and unmarked files are marked with @samp{*}. Files
399marked in any other way are not affected.
400
38458147 401@item * c @var{old-markchar} @var{new-markchar}
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402@kindex * c @r{(Dired)}
403@findex dired-change-marks
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404Replace all marks that use the character @var{old-markchar} with marks
405that use the character @var{new-markchar} (@code{dired-change-marks}).
406This command is the primary way to create or use marks other than
407@samp{*} or @samp{D}. The arguments are single characters---do not use
408@key{RET} to terminate them.
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409
410You can use almost any character as a mark character by means of this
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411command, to distinguish various classes of files. If @var{old-markchar}
412is a space (@samp{ }), then the command operates on all unmarked files;
413if @var{new-markchar} is a space, then the command unmarks the files it
414acts on.
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415
416To illustrate the power of this command, here is how to put @samp{D}
417flags on all the files that have no marks, while unflagging all those
418that already have @samp{D} flags:
419
420@example
421* c D t * c SPC D * c t SPC
422@end example
423
91dc757e 424This assumes that no files were already marked with @samp{t}.
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425
426@item % m @var{regexp} @key{RET}
427@itemx * % @var{regexp} @key{RET}
428@findex dired-mark-files-regexp
429@kindex % m @r{(Dired)}
430@kindex * % @r{(Dired)}
431Mark (with @samp{*}) all files whose names match the regular expression
432@var{regexp} (@code{dired-mark-files-regexp}). This command is like
433@kbd{% d}, except that it marks files with @samp{*} instead of flagging
434with @samp{D}. @xref{Flagging Many Files}.
435
436Only the non-directory part of the file name is used in matching. Use
437@samp{^} and @samp{$} to anchor matches. Exclude subdirectories by
438hiding them (@pxref{Hiding Subdirectories}).
439
440@item % g @var{regexp} @key{RET}
441@findex dired-mark-files-containing-regexp
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442@kindex % g @r{(Dired)}
443@cindex finding files containing regexp matches (in Dired)
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444Mark (with @samp{*}) all files whose @emph{contents} contain a match for
445the regular expression @var{regexp}
446(@code{dired-mark-files-containing-regexp}). This command is like
447@kbd{% m}, except that it searches the file contents instead of the file
448name.
449
450@item C-_
451@kindex C-_ @r{(Dired)}
452@findex dired-undo
453Undo changes in the Dired buffer, such as adding or removing
4691d21e 454marks (@code{dired-undo}). @emph{This command does not revert the
3a2aa1dc 455actual file operations, nor recover lost files!} It just undoes
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456changes in the buffer itself. For example, if used after renaming one
457or more files, @code{dired-undo} restores the original names, which
458will get the Dired buffer out of sync with the actual contents of the
459directory.
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460@end table
461
462@node Operating on Files
463@section Operating on Files
464@cindex operating on files in Dired
465
466 This section describes the basic Dired commands to operate on one file
467or several files. All of these commands are capital letters; all of
468them use the minibuffer, either to read an argument or to ask for
469confirmation, before they act. All of them give you several ways to
470specify which files to manipulate:
471
472@itemize @bullet
473@item
474If you give the command a numeric prefix argument @var{n}, it operates
475on the next @var{n} files, starting with the current file. (If @var{n}
476is negative, the command operates on the @minus{}@var{n} files preceding
477the current line.)
478
479@item
480Otherwise, if some files are marked with @samp{*}, the command operates
481on all those files.
482
483@item
484Otherwise, the command operates on the current file only.
485@end itemize
486
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487@vindex dired-dwim-target
488@cindex two directories (in Dired)
489 Commands which ask for a destination directory, such as those which
490copy and rename files or create links for them, try to guess the default
491target directory for the operation. Normally, they suggest the Dired
492buffer's default directory, but if the variable @code{dired-dwim-target}
493is non-@code{nil}, and if there is another Dired buffer displayed in the
494next window, that other buffer's directory is suggested instead.
495
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496 Here are the file-manipulating commands that operate on files in this
497way. (Some other Dired commands, such as @kbd{!} and the @samp{%}
498commands, also use these conventions to decide which files to work on.)
499
500@table @kbd
501@findex dired-do-copy
502@kindex C @r{(Dired)}
a33b10b5 503@cindex copying files (in Dired)
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504@item C @var{new} @key{RET}
505Copy the specified files (@code{dired-do-copy}). The argument @var{new}
506is the directory to copy into, or (if copying a single file) the new
507name.
508
509@vindex dired-copy-preserve-time
510If @code{dired-copy-preserve-time} is non-@code{nil}, then copying with
511this command sets the modification time of the new file to be the same
512as that of the old file.
513
a8ef67ae 514@vindex dired-recursive-copies
db1433e5 515@cindex recursive copying
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516The variable @code{dired-recursive-copies} controls whether
517directories are copied recursively. The default is to not copy
518recursively, which means that directories cannot be copied.
519
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520@item D
521@findex dired-do-delete
522@kindex D @r{(Dired)}
523Delete the specified files (@code{dired-do-delete}). Like the other
524commands in this section, this command operates on the @emph{marked}
525files, or the next @var{n} files. By contrast, @kbd{x}
5942fb80 526(@code{dired-do-flagged-delete}) deletes all @dfn{flagged} files.
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527
528@findex dired-do-rename
529@kindex R @r{(Dired)}
a33b10b5 530@cindex renaming files (in Dired)
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531@item R @var{new} @key{RET}
532Rename the specified files (@code{dired-do-rename}). The argument
533@var{new} is the directory to rename into, or (if renaming a single
534file) the new name.
535
536Dired automatically changes the visited file name of buffers associated
537with renamed files so that they refer to the new names.
538
539@findex dired-do-hardlink
540@kindex H @r{(Dired)}
a33b10b5 541@cindex hard links (in Dired)
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542@item H @var{new} @key{RET}
543Make hard links to the specified files (@code{dired-do-hardlink}). The
544argument @var{new} is the directory to make the links in, or (if making
545just one link) the name to give the link.
546
547@findex dired-do-symlink
548@kindex S @r{(Dired)}
a33b10b5 549@cindex symlinks (in Dired)
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550@item S @var{new} @key{RET}
551Make symbolic links to the specified files (@code{dired-do-symlink}).
552The argument @var{new} is the directory to make the links in, or (if
553making just one link) the name to give the link.
554
555@findex dired-do-chmod
556@kindex M @r{(Dired)}
a33b10b5 557@cindex changing file permissions (in Dired)
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558@item M @var{modespec} @key{RET}
559Change the mode (also called ``permission bits'') of the specified files
560(@code{dired-do-chmod}). This uses the @code{chmod} program, so
561@var{modespec} can be any argument that @code{chmod} can handle.
562
563@findex dired-do-chgrp
564@kindex G @r{(Dired)}
4946337d 565@cindex changing file group (in Dired)
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566@item G @var{newgroup} @key{RET}
567Change the group of the specified files to @var{newgroup}
568(@code{dired-do-chgrp}).
569
570@findex dired-do-chown
571@kindex O @r{(Dired)}
a33b10b5 572@cindex changing file owner (in Dired)
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573@item O @var{newowner} @key{RET}
574Change the owner of the specified files to @var{newowner}
575(@code{dired-do-chown}). (On most systems, only the superuser can do
576this.)
577
578@vindex dired-chown-program
579The variable @code{dired-chown-program} specifies the name of the
580program to use to do the work (different systems put @code{chown} in
581different places).
582
583@findex dired-do-print
584@kindex P @r{(Dired)}
a33b10b5 585@cindex printing files (in Dired)
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586@item P @var{command} @key{RET}
587Print the specified files (@code{dired-do-print}). You must specify the
588command to print them with, but the minibuffer starts out with a
589suitable guess made using the variables @code{lpr-command} and
590@code{lpr-switches} (the same variables that @code{lpr-buffer} uses;
591@pxref{Hardcopy}).
592
593@findex dired-do-compress
594@kindex Z @r{(Dired)}
a33b10b5 595@cindex compressing files (in Dired)
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596@item Z
597Compress the specified files (@code{dired-do-compress}). If the file
598appears to be a compressed file already, it is uncompressed instead.
599
600@findex dired-do-load
601@kindex L @r{(Dired)}
a33b10b5 602@cindex loading several files (in Dired)
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603@item L
604Load the specified Emacs Lisp files (@code{dired-do-load}).
605@xref{Lisp Libraries}.
606
607@findex dired-do-byte-compile
608@kindex B @r{(Dired)}
a33b10b5 609@cindex byte-compiling several files (in Dired)
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610@item B
611Byte compile the specified Emacs Lisp files
612(@code{dired-do-byte-compile}). @xref{Byte Compilation,, Byte
613Compilation, elisp, The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.
614
615@kindex A @r{(Dired)}
616@findex dired-do-search
a33b10b5 617@cindex search multiple files (in Dired)
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618@item A @var{regexp} @key{RET}
619Search all the specified files for the regular expression @var{regexp}
620(@code{dired-do-search}).
621
622This command is a variant of @code{tags-search}. The search stops at
623the first match it finds; use @kbd{M-,} to resume the search and find
624the next match. @xref{Tags Search}.
625
626@kindex Q @r{(Dired)}
5942fb80 627@findex dired-do-query-replace-regexp
a33b10b5 628@cindex search and replace in multiple files (in Dired)
5942fb80 629@item Q @var{regexp} @key{RET} @var{to} @key{RET}
6bf7aab6 630Perform @code{query-replace-regexp} on each of the specified files,
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631replacing matches for @var{regexp} with the string
632@var{to} (@code{dired-do-query-replace-regexp}).
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633
634This command is a variant of @code{tags-query-replace}. If you exit the
635query replace loop, you can use @kbd{M-,} to resume the scan and replace
636more matches. @xref{Tags Search}.
637@end table
638
639@kindex + @r{(Dired)}
640@findex dired-create-directory
641 One special file-operation command is @kbd{+}
642(@code{dired-create-directory}). This command reads a directory name and
643creates the directory if it does not already exist.
644
645@node Shell Commands in Dired
646@section Shell Commands in Dired
647@cindex shell commands, Dired
648
649@findex dired-do-shell-command
650@kindex ! @r{(Dired)}
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651@kindex X @r{(Dired)}
652The Dired command @kbd{!} (@code{dired-do-shell-command}) reads a shell
6bf7aab6 653command string in the minibuffer and runs that shell command on all the
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654specified files. @kbd{X} is a synonym for @kbd{!}. You can specify the
655files to operate on in the usual ways for Dired commands
656(@pxref{Operating on Files}). There are two ways of applying a shell
657command to multiple files:
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658
659@itemize @bullet
660@item
661If you use @samp{*} in the shell command, then it runs just once, with
662the list of file names substituted for the @samp{*}. The order of file
663names is the order of appearance in the Dired buffer.
664
665Thus, @kbd{! tar cf foo.tar * @key{RET}} runs @code{tar} on the entire
666list of file names, putting them into one tar file @file{foo.tar}.
667
668@item
669If the command string doesn't contain @samp{*}, then it runs once
670@emph{for each file}, with the file name added at the end.
671
672For example, @kbd{! uudecode @key{RET}} runs @code{uudecode} on each
673file.
674@end itemize
675
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676What if you want to run the shell command once for each file, with the
677file name inserted in the middle? You can use @samp{?} in the command
678instead of @samp{*}. The current file name is substituted for
679@samp{?}. You can use @samp{?} more than once. For instance, here is
680how to uuencode each file, making the output file name by appending
681@samp{.uu} to the input file name:
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682
683@example
a8ef67ae 684uuencode ? ? > ?.uu
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685@end example
686
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687To use the file names in a more complicated fashion, you can use a
688shell loop. For example, this shell command is another way to
689uuencode each file:
690
691@example
5942fb80 692for file in *; do uuencode "$file" "$file" >"$file".uu; done
a8ef67ae 693@end example
4bce911c 694
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695The working directory for the shell command is the top-level directory
696of the Dired buffer.
697
698The @kbd{!} command does not attempt to update the Dired buffer to show
699new or modified files, because it doesn't really understand shell
700commands, and does not know what files the shell command changed. Use
701the @kbd{g} command to update the Dired buffer (@pxref{Dired
702Updating}).
703
704@node Transforming File Names
705@section Transforming File Names in Dired
706
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707 This section describes Dired commands which alter file names in a
708systematic way.
709
710 Like the basic Dired file-manipulation commands (@pxref{Operating on
711Files}), the commands described here operate either on the next
712@var{n} files, or on all files marked with @samp{*}, or on the current
713file. (To mark files, use the commands described in @ref{Marks vs
714Flags}.)
715
716 All of the commands described in this section work
717@emph{interactively}: they ask you to confirm the operation for each
718candidate file. Thus, you can select more files than you actually
719need to operate on (e.g., with a regexp that matches many files), and
720then refine the selection by typing @kbd{y} or @kbd{n} when the
721command prompts for confirmation.
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722
723@table @kbd
724@findex dired-upcase
725@kindex % u @r{(Dired)}
a33b10b5 726@cindex upcase file names
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727@item % u
728Rename each of the selected files to an upper-case name
729(@code{dired-upcase}). If the old file names are @file{Foo}
730and @file{bar}, the new names are @file{FOO} and @file{BAR}.
731
732@item % l
733@findex dired-downcase
734@kindex % l @r{(Dired)}
a33b10b5 735@cindex downcase file names
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736Rename each of the selected files to a lower-case name
737(@code{dired-downcase}). If the old file names are @file{Foo} and
738@file{bar}, the new names are @file{foo} and @file{bar}.
739
740@item % R @var{from} @key{RET} @var{to} @key{RET}
741@kindex % R @r{(Dired)}
742@findex dired-do-rename-regexp
743@itemx % C @var{from} @key{RET} @var{to} @key{RET}
744@kindex % C @r{(Dired)}
745@findex dired-do-copy-regexp
746@itemx % H @var{from} @key{RET} @var{to} @key{RET}
747@kindex % H @r{(Dired)}
748@findex dired-do-hardlink-regexp
749@itemx % S @var{from} @key{RET} @var{to} @key{RET}
750@kindex % S @r{(Dired)}
751@findex dired-do-symlink-regexp
752These four commands rename, copy, make hard links and make soft links,
753in each case computing the new name by regular-expression substitution
754from the name of the old file.
755@end table
756
757 The four regular-expression substitution commands effectively perform
758a search-and-replace on the selected file names in the Dired buffer.
759They read two arguments: a regular expression @var{from}, and a
760substitution pattern @var{to}.
761
762 The commands match each ``old'' file name against the regular
763expression @var{from}, and then replace the matching part with @var{to}.
764You can use @samp{\&} and @samp{\@var{digit}} in @var{to} to refer to
765all or part of what the pattern matched in the old file name, as in
766@code{replace-regexp} (@pxref{Regexp Replace}). If the regular expression
767matches more than once in a file name, only the first match is replaced.
768
769 For example, @kbd{% R ^.*$ @key{RET} x-\& @key{RET}} renames each
770selected file by prepending @samp{x-} to its name. The inverse of this,
771removing @samp{x-} from the front of each file name, is also possible:
772one method is @kbd{% R ^x-\(.*\)$ @key{RET} \1 @key{RET}}; another is
773@kbd{% R ^x- @key{RET} @key{RET}}. (Use @samp{^} and @samp{$} to anchor
774matches that should span the whole filename.)
775
776 Normally, the replacement process does not consider the files'
777directory names; it operates on the file name within the directory. If
778you specify a numeric argument of zero, then replacement affects the
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779entire absolute file name including directory name. (Non-zero
780argument specifies the number of files to operate on.)
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781
782 Often you will want to select the set of files to operate on using the
783same @var{regexp} that you will use to operate on them. To do this,
784mark those files with @kbd{% m @var{regexp} @key{RET}}, then use the
785same regular expression in the command to operate on the files. To make
786this easier, the @kbd{%} commands to operate on files use the last
787regular expression specified in any @kbd{%} command as a default.
788
789@node Comparison in Dired
790@section File Comparison with Dired
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791@cindex file comparison (in Dired)
792@cindex compare files (in Dired)
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793
794 Here are two Dired commands that compare specified files using
795@code{diff}.
796
797@table @kbd
798@item =
799@findex dired-diff
800@kindex = @r{(Dired)}
801Compare the current file (the file at point) with another file (the file
802at the mark) using the @code{diff} program (@code{dired-diff}). The
803file at the mark is the first argument of @code{diff}, and the file at
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804point is the second argument. Use @kbd{C-@key{SPC}}
805(@code{set-mark-command}) to set the mark at the first file's line
806(@pxref{Setting Mark}), since @code{dired-diff} ignores the files marked
807with the Dired's @kbd{m} command.
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808
809@findex dired-backup-diff
810@kindex M-= @r{(Dired)}
811@item M-=
812Compare the current file with its latest backup file
813(@code{dired-backup-diff}). If the current file is itself a backup,
814compare it with the file it is a backup of; this way, you can compare
815a file with any backup version of your choice.
816
817The backup file is the first file given to @code{diff}.
818@end table
819
820@node Subdirectories in Dired
821@section Subdirectories in Dired
822@cindex subdirectories in Dired
823@cindex expanding subdirectories in Dired
824
825 A Dired buffer displays just one directory in the normal case;
826but you can optionally include its subdirectories as well.
827
828 The simplest way to include multiple directories in one Dired buffer is
829to specify the options @samp{-lR} for running @code{ls}. (If you give a
830numeric argument when you run Dired, then you can specify these options
831in the minibuffer.) That produces a recursive directory listing showing
832all subdirectories at all levels.
833
834 But usually all the subdirectories are too many; usually you will
835prefer to include specific subdirectories only. You can do this with
836the @kbd{i} command:
837
838@table @kbd
839@findex dired-maybe-insert-subdir
840@kindex i @r{(Dired)}
841@item i
842@cindex inserted subdirectory (Dired)
843@cindex in-situ subdirectory (Dired)
844Insert the contents of a subdirectory later in the buffer.
845@end table
846
847Use the @kbd{i} (@code{dired-maybe-insert-subdir}) command on a line
848that describes a file which is a directory. It inserts the contents of
849that directory into the same Dired buffer, and moves there. Inserted
850subdirectory contents follow the top-level directory of the Dired
851buffer, just as they do in @samp{ls -lR} output.
852
853If the subdirectory's contents are already present in the buffer, the
854@kbd{i} command just moves to it.
855
856In either case, @kbd{i} sets the Emacs mark before moving, so @kbd{C-u
857C-@key{SPC}} takes you back to the old position in the buffer (the line
858describing that subdirectory).
859
860Use the @kbd{l} command (@code{dired-do-redisplay}) to update the
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861subdirectory's contents. Use @kbd{C-u k} on the subdirectory header
862line to delete the subdirectory. @xref{Dired Updating}.
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863
864@node Subdirectory Motion
865@section Moving Over Subdirectories
866
867 When a Dired buffer lists subdirectories, you can use the page motion
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868commands @kbd{C-x [} and @kbd{C-x ]} to move by entire directories
869(@pxref{Pages}).
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870
871@cindex header line (Dired)
872@cindex directory header lines
873 The following commands move across, up and down in the tree of
874directories within one Dired buffer. They move to @dfn{directory header
875lines}, which are the lines that give a directory's name, at the
876beginning of the directory's contents.
877
878@table @kbd
879@findex dired-next-subdir
880@kindex C-M-n @r{(Dired)}
881@item C-M-n
882Go to next subdirectory header line, regardless of level
883(@code{dired-next-subdir}).
884
885@findex dired-prev-subdir
886@kindex C-M-p @r{(Dired)}
887@item C-M-p
888Go to previous subdirectory header line, regardless of level
889(@code{dired-prev-subdir}).
890
891@findex dired-tree-up
892@kindex C-M-u @r{(Dired)}
893@item C-M-u
894Go up to the parent directory's header line (@code{dired-tree-up}).
895
896@findex dired-tree-down
897@kindex C-M-d @r{(Dired)}
898@item C-M-d
899Go down in the directory tree, to the first subdirectory's header line
900(@code{dired-tree-down}).
901
902@findex dired-prev-dirline
903@kindex < @r{(Dired)}
904@item <
905Move up to the previous directory-file line (@code{dired-prev-dirline}).
906These lines are the ones that describe a directory as a file in its
907parent directory.
908
909@findex dired-next-dirline
910@kindex > @r{(Dired)}
911@item >
912Move down to the next directory-file line (@code{dired-prev-dirline}).
913@end table
914
915@node Hiding Subdirectories
916@section Hiding Subdirectories
917
918@cindex hiding in Dired (Dired)
919 @dfn{Hiding} a subdirectory means to make it invisible, except for its
920header line, via selective display (@pxref{Selective Display}).
921
922@table @kbd
923@item $
924@findex dired-hide-subdir
925@kindex $ @r{(Dired)}
926Hide or reveal the subdirectory that point is in, and move point to the
927next subdirectory (@code{dired-hide-subdir}). A numeric argument serves
928as a repeat count.
929
930@item M-$
931@findex dired-hide-all
932@kindex M-$ @r{(Dired)}
933Hide all subdirectories in this Dired buffer, leaving only their header
934lines (@code{dired-hide-all}). Or, if any subdirectory is currently
935hidden, make all subdirectories visible again. You can use this command
936to get an overview in very deep directory trees or to move quickly to
937subdirectories far away.
938@end table
939
940 Ordinary Dired commands never consider files inside a hidden
941subdirectory. For example, the commands to operate on marked files
942ignore files in hidden directories even if they are marked. Thus you
943can use hiding to temporarily exclude subdirectories from operations
944without having to remove the markers.
945
946 The subdirectory hiding commands toggle; that is, they hide what was
947visible, and show what was hidden.
948
949@node Dired Updating
950@section Updating the Dired Buffer
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951@cindex updating Dired buffer
952@cindex refreshing displayed files
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953
954 This section describes commands to update the Dired buffer to reflect
955outside (non-Dired) changes in the directories and files, and to delete
956part of the Dired buffer.
957
958@table @kbd
959@item g
960Update the entire contents of the Dired buffer (@code{revert-buffer}).
961
962@item l
963Update the specified files (@code{dired-do-redisplay}).
964
965@item k
966Delete the specified @emph{file lines}---not the files, just the lines
967(@code{dired-do-kill-lines}).
968
969@item s
970Toggle between alphabetical order and date/time order
971(@code{dired-sort-toggle-or-edit}).
972
973@item C-u s @var{switches} @key{RET}
974Refresh the Dired buffer using @var{switches} as
975@code{dired-listing-switches}.
976@end table
977
978@kindex g @r{(Dired)}
979@findex revert-buffer @r{(Dired)}
980 Type @kbd{g} (@code{revert-buffer}) to update the contents of the
981Dired buffer, based on changes in the files and directories listed.
982This preserves all marks except for those on files that have vanished.
983Hidden subdirectories are updated but remain hidden.
984
985@kindex l @r{(Dired)}
986@findex dired-do-redisplay
987 To update only some of the files, type @kbd{l}
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988(@code{dired-do-redisplay}). Like the Dired file-operating commands,
989this command operates on the next @var{n} files (or previous
990@minus{}@var{n} files), or on the marked files if any, or on the
991current file. Updating the files means reading their current status,
992then updating their lines in the buffer to indicate that status.
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993
994 If you use @kbd{l} on a subdirectory header line, it updates the
995contents of the corresponding subdirectory.
996
997@kindex k @r{(Dired)}
998@findex dired-do-kill-lines
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999 To delete the specified @emph{file lines} from the buffer---not
1000delete the files---type @kbd{k} (@code{dired-do-kill-lines}). Like
1001the file-operating commands, this command operates on the next @var{n}
1002files, or on the marked files if any; but it does not operate on the
1003current file as a last resort.
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1004
1005 If you kill the line for a file that is a directory, the directory's
1006contents are also deleted from the buffer. Typing @kbd{C-u k} on the
1007header line for a subdirectory is another way to delete a subdirectory
1008from the Dired buffer.
1009
1010 The @kbd{g} command brings back any individual lines that you have
1011killed in this way, but not subdirectories---you must use @kbd{i} to
5942fb80 1012reinsert a subdirectory.
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1013
1014@cindex Dired sorting
1015@cindex sorting Dired buffer
1016@kindex s @r{(Dired)}
1017@findex dired-sort-toggle-or-edit
1018 The files in a Dired buffers are normally listed in alphabetical order
1019by file names. Alternatively Dired can sort them by date/time. The
1020Dired command @kbd{s} (@code{dired-sort-toggle-or-edit}) switches
1021between these two sorting modes. The mode line in a Dired buffer
1022indicates which way it is currently sorted---by name, or by date.
1023
1024 @kbd{C-u s @var{switches} @key{RET}} lets you specify a new value for
1025@code{dired-listing-switches}.
1026
1027@node Dired and Find
1028@section Dired and @code{find}
1029@cindex @code{find} and Dired
1030
1031 You can select a set of files for display in a Dired buffer more
1032flexibly by using the @code{find} utility to choose the files.
1033
1034@findex find-name-dired
1035 To search for files with names matching a wildcard pattern use
1036@kbd{M-x find-name-dired}. It reads arguments @var{directory} and
1037@var{pattern}, and chooses all the files in @var{directory} or its
1038subdirectories whose individual names match @var{pattern}.
1039
1040 The files thus chosen are displayed in a Dired buffer in which the
1041ordinary Dired commands are available.
1042
1043@findex find-grep-dired
1044 If you want to test the contents of files, rather than their names,
1045use @kbd{M-x find-grep-dired}. This command reads two minibuffer
1046arguments, @var{directory} and @var{regexp}; it chooses all the files in
1047@var{directory} or its subdirectories that contain a match for
1048@var{regexp}. It works by running the programs @code{find} and
1049@code{grep}. See also @kbd{M-x grep-find}, in @ref{Compilation}.
1050Remember to write the regular expression for @code{grep}, not for Emacs.
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1051(An alternative method of showing files whose contents match a given
1052regexp is the @kbd{% g @var{regexp}} command, see @ref{Marks vs Flags}.)
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1053
1054@findex find-dired
1055 The most general command in this series is @kbd{M-x find-dired}, which
1056lets you specify any condition that @code{find} can test. It takes two
1057minibuffer arguments, @var{directory} and @var{find-args}; it runs
1058@code{find} in @var{directory}, passing @var{find-args} to tell
1059@code{find} what condition to test. To use this command, you need to
1060know how to use @code{find}.
1061
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1062@findex locate
1063@findex locate-with-filter
1064@cindex file database (locate)
1065@vindex locate-command
3a2aa1dc 1066 @kbd{M-x locate} provides a similar interface to the @code{locate}
bb124d48 1067program. @kbd{M-x locate-with-filter} is similar, but keeps only lines
3a2aa1dc 1068matching a given regular expression.
a8ef67ae 1069
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1070@vindex find-ls-option
1071 The format of listing produced by these commands is controlled by the
1072variable @code{find-ls-option}, whose default value specifies using
1073options @samp{-ld} for @code{ls}. If your listings are corrupted, you
1074may need to change the value of this variable.