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RE: Dired buffers and finding files...
From: |
Bingham, Jay |
Subject: |
RE: Dired buffers and finding files... |
Date: |
Wed, 23 Oct 2002 10:14:12 -0500 |
I have just one question about C-x C-j, what function does it invoke on your
machine.
I am running 21.1 on Win2000 and 20.4 on a Unix box, it is undefined in both of
these.
I would like to suggest to all responders that when ever your reply includes
instructions to press a key sequence to invoke a function that you use the
convention used in the help to describe key sequences and the functions that
they invoke, i.e. `C-x d' (`dired'),.
-_
J_)
C_)ingham
. HP - NonStop Austin Software & Services - Software Quality Assurance
. Austin, TX
. Language is the apparel in which your thoughts parade in public.
. Never clothe them in vulgar and shoddy attire. -Dr. George W. Crane-
-----Original Message-----
From: Tim Haynes [mailto:usenet@stirfried.vegetable.org.uk]
Sent: Tuesday, October 22, 2002 12:59 PM
To: help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org
Subject: Re: Dired buffers and finding files...
Bernd Wolter <mathae.wolter@gmx.de> writes:
> Martin Schmitz <dosenfleisch@gmx.de> writes:
>
>> Tim Haynes <usenet@stirfried.vegetable.org.uk> writes:
>>
>> > If I have a buffer visiting a file in a given directory - e.g.
>> > /tmp/foo.txt or something - and then decide I want to bring up a dired
>> > buffer of that directory, pressing `C-x C-f /tmp/ RET' flips me to the
>> > existing foo.txt ^^^^^^^
>>
>> Try 'C-x d RET'
>
> Or from within the buffer in question C-x C-j.
OK thanks for those two; I'll have a play imminently :8)
~Tim
--
The night skips the sleeping years |piglet@stirfried.vegetable.org.uk
And re-awakes the memory |http://spodzone.org.uk/
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