Mercurial > emacs
changeset 61846:56236a372355
(Misc Dired Features): Document dired-compare-directories.
author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 26 Apr 2005 10:47:03 +0000 |
parents | 872e621e7f1a |
children | fee88679cf47 |
files | man/dired.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 26 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-) [+] |
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--- a/man/dired.texi Tue Apr 26 10:46:10 2005 +0000 +++ b/man/dired.texi Tue Apr 26 10:47:03 2005 +0000 @@ -1161,6 +1161,32 @@ headerline, @kbd{w} gives you the absolute name of that directory. Any prefix argument or marked files are ignored in this case. +@findex dired-compare-directories + The command @kbd{M-x dired-compare-directories} is used to compare +the current Dired buffer with another directory. It marks all the files +that are ``different'' between the two directories. It puts these marks +in all Dired buffers where these files are listed, which of course includes +the current buffer. + + The default comparison method (used if you type @key{RET} at the +prompt) is to compare just the file names---each file name that does +not appear in the other directory is ``different''. You can specify +more stringent comparisons by entering a Lisp expression, which can +refer to the variables @code{size1} and @code{size2}, the respective +file sizes; @code{mtime1} and @code{mtime2}, the last modification +times in seconds, as floating point numers; and @code{fa1} and +@code{fa2}, the respective file attribute lists (as returned by the +function @code{file-attributes}). This expression is evaluated for +each pair of like-named files, and if the expression's value is +non-@code{nil}, those files are considered ``different''. + + For instance, @code{M-x dired-compare-directories @key{RET} (> +mtime1 mtime2) @key{RET}} marks files newer in this directory than in +the other, and marks files older in the other directory than in this +one. It also marks files with no counterpart, in both directories, as +always. + +@cindex drag and drop, Dired On the X window system, Emacs supports the ``drag and drop'' protocol. You can drag a file object from another program, and drop it onto a Dired buffer; this either moves, copies, or creates a link