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One of the most frequent uses of Dired is to first flag files for deletion, then delete the files that were flagged.
Flag this file for deletion
(dired-flag-file-deletion).
Remove the deletion flag (dired-unmark).
Move point to previous line and remove the deletion flag
on that line (dired-unmark-backward).
Delete files flagged for deletion
(dired-do-flagged-delete).
You can flag a file for deletion by moving to the line
describing the file and typing d
(dired-flag-file-deletion). The deletion flag is
visible as a ‘D’ at the beginning of the
line. This command moves point to the next line, so that repeated
d commands flag successive files. A numeric prefix
argument serves as a repeat count; a negative count means to flag
preceding files.
If the region is active, the d command flags all files in the region for deletion; in this case, the command does not move point, and ignores any prefix argument.
The reason for flagging files for deletion, rather than
deleting files immediately, is to reduce the danger of deleting a
file accidentally. Until you direct Dired to delete the flagged
files, you can remove deletion flags using the commands
u and DEL. u
(dired-unmark) works just like d, but
removes flags rather than making flags. DEL
(dired-unmark-backward) moves upward, removing
flags; it is like u with argument
−1. A numeric prefix argument to either
command serves as a repeat count, with a negative count meaning
to unflag in the opposite direction. If the region is active,
these commands instead unflag all files in the region, without
moving point.
To delete flagged files, type x
(dired-do-flagged-delete). This command displays a
list of all the file names flagged for deletion, and requests
confirmation with yes. If you confirm, Dired deletes
the flagged files, then deletes their lines from the text of the
Dired buffer. The Dired buffer, with somewhat fewer lines,
remains selected.
If you answer no or quit with C-g when asked to confirm, you return immediately to Dired, with the deletion flags still present in the buffer, and no files actually deleted.
You can delete empty directories just like other files, but
normally Dired cannot delete directories that are nonempty. If
the variable dired-recursive-deletes is
non-nil, then Dired can delete nonempty directories
including all their contents. That can be somewhat
risky.
If you change the variable
delete-by-moving-to-trash to t, the
above deletion commands will move the affected files or
directories into the operating system’s Trash, instead of
deleting them outright. See Misc File Ops.
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