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[Emacs-diffs] emacs-26 ed05eaa: Improvements in dired.texi


From: Eli Zaretskii
Subject: [Emacs-diffs] emacs-26 ed05eaa: Improvements in dired.texi
Date: Wed, 21 Mar 2018 12:50:37 -0400 (EDT)

branch: emacs-26
commit ed05eaa9487b2c5a76a512532239a106e1cf9a2a
Author: Eli Zaretskii <address@hidden>
Commit: Eli Zaretskii <address@hidden>

    Improvements in dired.texi
    
    * doc/emacs/dired.texi (Dired): Mention that Dired works with
    remote directories.
    (Dired Enter): ls-lisp is used on some remote systems as well.
    (Dired Navigation): Mention and index the command names.
    (Dired Deletion): Document the 'always' value of
    dired-recursive-deletes.  Mention the alternative deletion method.
    (Marks vs Flags): Fix spelling of Auto-Revert mode.  Document what
    marking does on a subdirectory header line.
    (Operating on Files): Document that 'Z' uses gzip or compress.
    (Comparison in Dired): Mention ediff-files.
    (Misc Dired Features): Fix a typo.  Suggested by Michael Albinus
    <address@hidden> in address@hidden
---
 doc/emacs/dired.texi | 48 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++----------------
 1 file changed, 32 insertions(+), 16 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/emacs/dired.texi b/doc/emacs/dired.texi
index 309dfb3..82882ab 100644
--- a/doc/emacs/dired.texi
+++ b/doc/emacs/dired.texi
@@ -12,7 +12,8 @@
   Dired makes an Emacs buffer containing a listing of a directory, and
 optionally some of its subdirectories as well.  You can use the normal
 Emacs commands to move around in this buffer, and special Dired
-commands to operate on the listed files.
+commands to operate on the listed files.  Dired works with both local
+and remote directories.
 
   The Dired buffer is normally read-only, and inserting text in it is
 not allowed (however, the Wdired mode allows that, @pxref{Wdired}).
@@ -109,8 +110,9 @@ default) means to perform the check; any other 
address@hidden value
 means to use the @samp{--dired} option; and @code{nil} means not to
 use the @samp{--dired} option.
 
-  On MS-Windows and MS-DOS systems, Emacs emulates @command{ls}.
address@hidden in Lisp}, for options and peculiarities of this emulation.
+  On MS-Windows and MS-DOS systems, and also on some remote systems,
+Emacs emulates @command{ls}.  @xref{ls in Lisp}, for options and
+peculiarities of this emulation.
 
 @findex dired-other-window
 @kindex C-x 4 d
@@ -131,10 +133,13 @@ deletes its window if the window was created just for 
that buffer.
 
 @kindex C-n @r{(Dired)}
 @kindex C-p @r{(Dired)}
address@hidden dired-next-line
address@hidden dired-previous-line
   All the usual Emacs cursor motion commands are available in Dired
-buffers.  The keys @kbd{C-n} and @kbd{C-p} are redefined to put the
-cursor at the beginning of the file name on the line, rather than at
-the beginning of the line.
+buffers.  The keys @kbd{C-n} and @kbd{C-p} are redefined to run
address@hidden and @code{dired-previous-line}, respectively,
+and they put the cursor at the beginning of the file name on the line,
+rather than at the beginning of the line.
 
 @kindex SPC @r{(Dired)}
   For extra convenience, @key{SPC} and @kbd{n} in Dired are equivalent
@@ -235,10 +240,11 @@ the buffer, and no files actually deleted.
   You can delete empty directories just like other files, but normally
 Dired cannot delete directories that are nonempty.  If the variable
 @code{dired-recursive-deletes} is address@hidden, then Dired can
-delete nonempty directories including all their contents.  That can
-be somewhat risky.
-Even if you have set @code{dired-recursive-deletes} to @code{nil},
-you might want sometimes to delete recursively directories
+delete nonempty directories including all their contents.  That can be
+somewhat risky.  If the value of the variable is @code{always}, Dired
+will delete nonempty directories recursively, which is even more
+risky.  Even if you have set @code{dired-recursive-deletes} to
address@hidden, you might want sometimes to delete recursively directories
 without being asked for confirmation for all of them.  This is handy
 when you have marked many directories for deletion and you are very
 sure that all of them can safely be deleted.  For every nonempty
@@ -252,6 +258,9 @@ questions.
 directories into the operating system's Trash, instead of deleting
 them outright.  @xref{Misc File Ops}.
 
+  An alternative way of deleting files is to mark them with @kbd{m}
+and delete with @kbd{D}, see @ref{Operating on Files}.
+
 @node Flagging Many Files
 @section Flagging Many Files at Once
 @cindex flagging many files for deletion (in Dired)
@@ -420,7 +429,9 @@ Mark the current file with @samp{*} (@code{dired-mark}).  
If the
 region is active, mark all files in the region instead; otherwise, if
 a numeric argument @var{n} is supplied, mark the next @var{n} files
 instead, starting with the current file (if @var{n} is negative, mark
-the previous @address@hidden files).
+the previous @address@hidden files).  If invoked on a subdirectory
+header line (@pxref{Subdirectories in Dired}), this command marks all
+the files in that subdirectory.
 
 @item * *
 @kindex * * @r{(Dired)}
@@ -578,10 +589,10 @@ command will look in the buffer without revisiting the 
file, so the results
 might be inconsistent with the file on disk if its contents have changed
 since it was last visited.  If you don't want this, you may wish to
 revert the files you have visited in your buffers, or to turn on
address@hidden mode in those buffers, before invoking this
-command.  @xref{Reverting}.  If you prefer that this command should always
+Auto-Revert mode in those buffers, before invoking this command.
address@hidden  If you prefer that this command should always
 revisit the file, without you having to revert the file or enable
address@hidden mode, you might want to set
+Auto-Revert mode, you might want to set
 @code{dired-always-read-filesystem} to address@hidden
 
 @item C-/
@@ -755,7 +766,9 @@ suitable guess made using the variables @code{lpr-command} 
and
 @item Z
 Compress the specified files (@code{dired-do-compress}).  If the file
 appears to be a compressed file already, uncompress it instead.  Each
-marked file is compressed into its own archive.
+marked file is compressed into its own archive.  This uses the
address@hidden program if it is available, otherwise it uses
address@hidden
 
 @findex dired-do-compress-to
 @kindex c @r{(Dired)}
@@ -1037,6 +1050,9 @@ minibuffer is the file at the mark (i.e., the ordinary 
Emacs mark,
 not a Dired mark; @pxref{Setting Mark}).  Otherwise, if the file at
 point has a backup file (@pxref{Backup}), that is the default.
 
+  You could also compare files using @code{ediff-files}, see
address@hidden Entry Points,,, ediff, Ediff User's Manual}.
+
 @node Subdirectories in Dired
 @section Subdirectories in Dired
 @cindex subdirectories in Dired
@@ -1465,7 +1481,7 @@ space.
 each marked file.  With just @kbd{C-u} as the prefix argument, it uses
 file names relative to the Dired buffer's default directory.  (This
 can still contain slashes if in a subdirectory.)  As a special case,
-if point is on a directory headerline, @kbd{w} gives you the absolute
+if point is on a directory header line, @kbd{w} gives you the absolute
 name of that directory.  Any prefix argument or marked files are
 ignored in this case.
 



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