From: Richard M. Stallman Date: Mon, 25 Mar 2002 00:44:51 +0000 (+0000) Subject: (Quoted File Names): Minor clarifications. X-Git-Tag: ttn-vms-21-2-B4~15981 X-Git-Url: http://git.eshelyaron.com/gitweb/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=e643ceae670107a1df04d7949e501723f81e1392;p=emacs.git (Quoted File Names): Minor clarifications. --- diff --git a/lisp/ChangeLog b/lisp/ChangeLog index 86235d723c2..23e7f846274 100644 --- a/lisp/ChangeLog +++ b/lisp/ChangeLog @@ -1,3 +1,16 @@ +2002-03-24 Richard M. Stallman + + * mail/rmail.el (rmail-resend): Call mail-abbrev-make-syntax-table. + + * progmodes/etags.el (tags-query-replace): Pass t for NOERROR + to query-replace-read-args. + + * progmodes/compile.el (compilation-forget-errors): + Don't adjust compilation-parsing-end if it's nil. + + * replace.el (query-replace-read-args): New optional arg NOERROR. + (perform-replace): Use save-window-excursion around recursive edit. + 2002-03-24 Colin Walters * ibuffer.el (ibuffer): If the user has `ibuffer-use-other-window' diff --git a/man/files.texi b/man/files.texi index d119a85eb7d..1472b49c432 100644 --- a/man/files.texi +++ b/man/files.texi @@ -3034,19 +3034,23 @@ can refer to that file in Emacs as @samp{/:/foo:/bar}. character for a user's home directory. For example, @file{/:/tmp/~hack} refers to a file whose name is @file{~hack} in directory @file{/tmp}. - Likewise, quoting with @samp{/:} is one way to enter in the minibuffer -a file name that contains @samp{$}. However, the @samp{/:} must be at -the beginning of the minibuffer in order to quote @samp{$}. (For -another way of quoting @samp{$} in file names see @ref{File Names with -@samp{$}}.) + Quoting with @samp{/:} is also a way to enter in the minibuffer a +file name that contains @samp{$}. In order for this to work, the +@samp{/:} must be at the beginning of the minibuffer contents. (You +can also double each @samp{$}; see @ref{File Names with @samp{$}}.) You can also quote wildcard characters with @samp{/:}, for visiting. -For example, @file{/:/tmp/foo*bar} visits the file @file{/tmp/foo*bar}. -However, in most cases you can simply type the wildcard characters for -themselves. For example, if the only file name in @file{/tmp} that -starts with @samp{foo} and ends with @samp{bar} is @file{foo*bar}, then -specifying @file{/tmp/foo*bar} will visit just @file{/tmp/foo*bar}. -Another way is to specify @file{/tmp/foo[*]bar}. +For example, @file{/:/tmp/foo*bar} visits the file +@file{/tmp/foo*bar}. + + Another method of getting the same result is to enter +@file{/tmp/foo[*]bar}, which is a wildcard specification that matches +only @file{/tmp/foo*bar}. However, in many cases there is no need to +quote the wildcard characters because even unquoted they give the +right result. For example, if the only file name in @file{/tmp} that +starts with @samp{foo} and ends with @samp{bar} is @file{foo*bar}, +then specifying @file{/tmp/foo*bar} will visit only +@file{/tmp/foo*bar}. @node File Name Cache @section File Name Cache