From 67bca9b20fd5287dcc4a7d08ca07d3a092d9e21a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "Richard M. Stallman" Date: Mon, 21 Mar 2005 18:12:14 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] (Misc Dired Features): Rename node from Misc Dired Commands. Mention effect of X drag and drop on Dired buffers. --- man/dired.texi | 43 ++++++++++++++++++++++++------------------- 1 file changed, 24 insertions(+), 19 deletions(-) diff --git a/man/dired.texi b/man/dired.texi index 3ce58f2b460..6973a4e4000 100644 --- a/man/dired.texi +++ b/man/dired.texi @@ -39,7 +39,7 @@ files. * Hiding Subdirectories:: Making subdirectories visible or invisible. * Updating: Dired Updating. Discarding lines for files of no interest. * Find: Dired and Find. Using `find' to choose the files for Dired. -* Misc: Misc Dired Commands. Various other features. +* Misc: Misc Dired Features. Various other features. @end menu @node Dired Enter @@ -1098,33 +1098,38 @@ may need to change the value of this variable. program. @kbd{M-x locate-with-filter} is similar, but keeps only lines matching a given regular expression. -These buffers don't work entirely like ordinary Dired buffers. File + These buffers don't work entirely like ordinary Dired buffers. File operations work, but do not always automatically update the buffer. Reverting the buffer with @kbd{g} deletes all inserted subdirectories, and erases all flags and marks. -@node Misc Dired Commands -@section Other Dired Commands +@node Misc Dired Features +@section Other Dired Features -@table @kbd -@item w @cindex Adding to the kill ring in Dired. @kindex w @r{(Dired)} @findex dired-copy-filename-as-kill -The @kbd{w} command (@code{dired-copy-filename-as-kill}) puts the + The @kbd{w} command (@code{dired-copy-filename-as-kill}) puts the names of the marked (or next @var{n}) files into the kill ring, as if -you had killed them with @kbd{C-w}. With a zero prefix argument -@var{n}=0, use the absolute file name of each marked file. With just -@kbd{C-u} as the prefix argument, use the relative file name of each -marked file. As a special case, if no prefix argument is given and -point is on a directory headerline, @kbd{w} gives you the name of that -directory without looking for marked files. - -The main purpose of the @kbd{w} command is so that you can yank the -file names into arguments for other Emacs commands. It also displays -what was pushed onto the kill ring, so you can use it to display the -list of currently marked files in the echo area. -@end table +you had killed them with @kbd{C-w}. + + The main purpose of this command is so that you can yank the file +names into arguments for other Emacs commands. It also displays what +was pushed onto the kill ring, so you can use it to display the list +of currently marked files in the echo area. With a zero prefix +argument @var{n}=0, this uses the absolute file name of each marked +file. With just @kbd{C-u} as the prefix argument, it uses the +relative file name of each marked file. As a special case, if no +prefix argument is given and point is on a directory headerline, +@kbd{w} gives you the name of that directory without looking for +marked files. + + On the X window system, Emacs supports the ``drag and drop'' +protocol. You can drag a file object from another program, and drop +it onto a Dired buffer; this either moves, copies, or creates a link +to the file in that directory. Precisely which action is taken is +determined by the originating program. Dragging files out of a Dired +buffer is currently not supported. @ignore arch-tag: d105f9b9-fc1b-4c5f-a949-9b2cf3ca2fc1 -- 2.39.2