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To prevent excessive consumption of disk space, Emacs can delete numbered backup versions automatically. Generally Emacs keeps the first few backups and the latest few backups, deleting any in between. This happens every time a new backup is made.
The two variables kept-old-versions
and kept-new-versions
control this deletion. Their values are, respectively, the number of oldest
(lowest-numbered) backups to keep and the number of newest
(highest-numbered) ones to keep, each time a new backup is made. The
backups in the middle (excluding those oldest and newest) are the excess
middle versions—those backups are deleted. These variables' values are
used when it is time to delete excess versions, just after a new backup
version is made; the newly made backup is included in the count in
kept-new-versions
. By default, both variables are 2.
If delete-old-versions
is t
, Emacs deletes the excess backup
files silently. If it is nil
, the default, Emacs asks you whether it
should delete the excess backup versions. If it has any other value, then
Emacs never automatically deletes backups.
Dired's . (Period) command can also be used to delete old versions. Voir la section Deleting Files with Dired.
Ce document a été généré par Eric Reinbold le 23 Février 2009 en utilisant texi2html 1.78.