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When a command reads an argument using the minibuffer with
completion, it also controls what happens when you type
RET
(minibuffer-complete-and-exit) to submit the
argument. There are four types of behavior:
An example of a command that uses this behavior is M-x, since it is meaningless for it to accept a non-existent command name.
Cautious completion is used for reading file names for files that must already exist, for example.
You can tweak the confirmation behavior by customizing the
variable confirm-nonexistent-file-or-buffer. The
default value, after-completion, gives the
behavior we have just described. If you change it to
nil, Emacs does not ask for confirmation,
falling back on permissive completion. If you change it to
any other non-nil value, Emacs asks for
confirmation whether or not the preceding command was
TAB.
This behavior is used by most commands that read file names, like C-x C-f, and commands that read buffer names, like C-x b.
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