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You can use the file name cache to make it easy to locate a file by
name, without having to remember exactly where it is located. When typing a
file name in the minibuffer, C-<tab>
(file-cache-minibuffer-complete
) completes it using the file name
cache. If you repeat C-<tab>, that cycles through the possible
completions of what you had originally typed. (However, note that the
C-<tab> character cannot be typed on most text-only terminals.)
The file name cache does not fill up automatically. Instead, you load file names into the cache using these commands:
Add each file name in directory to the file name cache.
Add each file name in directory and all of its nested subdirectories to the file name cache.
Add each file name in directory and all of its nested subdirectories
to the file name cache, using locate
to find them all.
Add each file name in each directory listed in variable to the file
name cache. variable should be a Lisp variable such as
load-path
or exec-path
, whose value is a list of directory
names.
Clear the cache; that is, remove all file names from it.
The file name cache is not persistent: it is kept and maintained only for
the duration of the Emacs session. You can view the contents of the cache
with the file-cache-display
command.
Ce document a été généré par Eric Reinbold le 23 Février 2009 en utilisant texi2html 1.78.