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This section describes commands to update the Dired buffer to reflect outside (non-Dired) changes in the directories and files, and to delete part of the Dired buffer.
Update the entire contents of the Dired buffer (revert-buffer
).
Update the specified files (dired-do-redisplay
). You specify the
files for l in the same way as for file operations.
Delete the specified file lines—not the files, just the lines
(dired-do-kill-lines
).
Toggle between alphabetical order and date/time order
(dired-sort-toggle-or-edit
).
Refresh the Dired buffer using switches as
dired-listing-switches
.
Type g (revert-buffer
) to update the contents of the Dired
buffer, based on changes in the files and directories listed. This
preserves all marks except for those on files that have vanished. Hidden
subdirectories are updated but remain hidden.
To update only some of the files, type l (dired-do-redisplay
).
Like the Dired file-operating commands, this command operates on the next
n files (or previous -n files), or on the marked files if
any, or on the current file. Updating the files means reading their current
status, then updating their lines in the buffer to indicate that status.
If you use l on a subdirectory header line, it updates the contents of the corresponding subdirectory.
To delete the specified file lines from the buffer—not delete the
files—type k (dired-do-kill-lines
). Like the file-operating
commands, this command operates on the next n files, or on the marked
files if any; but it does not operate on the current file as a last resort.
If you use k with a numeric prefix argument to kill the line for a file that is a directory, which you have inserted in the Dired buffer as a subdirectory, it deletes that subdirectory from the buffer as well. Typing C-u k on the header line for a subdirectory also deletes the subdirectory from the Dired buffer.
The g command brings back any individual lines that you have killed in this way, but not subdirectories—you must use i to reinsert a subdirectory.
The files in a Dired buffers are normally listed in alphabetical order by
file names. Alternatively Dired can sort them by date/time. The Dired
command s (dired-sort-toggle-or-edit
) switches between these
two sorting modes. The mode line in a Dired buffer indicates which way it
is currently sorted—by name, or by date.
C-u s switches <RET> lets you specify a new value for
dired-listing-switches
.
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Ce document a été généré par Eric Reinbold le 23 Février 2009 en utilisant texi2html 1.78.