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Re: How to get the new frame?
From: |
John Mastro |
Subject: |
Re: How to get the new frame? |
Date: |
Mon, 20 Jul 2015 20:56:54 -0700 |
> Is there a neat way in Lisp code to get at the frame which
> find-file-other-frame just has created? The function itself returns
> (indirectly, via switch-to-buffer-other-frame) the buffer and not the
> frame, just as all the *-other-frame functions.
Would something like this work?
(window-frame (get-buffer-window (find-file-other-frame ...)))
--
john
- How to get the new frame?, Ian Zimmerman, 2015/07/20
- Re: How to get the new frame?, Emanuel Berg, 2015/07/20
- Re: How to get the new frame?, Ian Zimmerman, 2015/07/20
- Re: How to get the new frame?, Emanuel Berg, 2015/07/20
- Re: How to get the new frame?, Ian Zimmerman, 2015/07/20
- Re: How to get the new frame?, Emanuel Berg, 2015/07/21
- Re: How to get the new frame?, Ian Zimmerman, 2015/07/21
- Re: How to get the new frame?, Emanuel Berg, 2015/07/21
Re: How to get the new frame?,
John Mastro <=
Message not available
- Re: How to get the new frame?, B. T. Raven, 2015/07/23
- Re: How to get the new frame?, Eli Zaretskii, 2015/07/23
- Message not available
- Re: How to get the new frame?, B. T. Raven, 2015/07/23
- Re: How to get the new frame?, Javier, 2015/07/23
- Re: How to get the new frame?, Eli Zaretskii, 2015/07/23
- Message not available
- Re: How to get the new frame?, B. T. Raven, 2015/07/23
- Re: How to get the new frame?, Javier, 2015/07/23
- Re: How to get the new frame?, Eli Zaretskii, 2015/07/24
- Re: How to get the new frame?, B. T. Raven, 2015/07/24