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To invoke Dired, type C-x d (dired).
This reads a directory name using the minibuffer, and opens a
Dired buffer listing the files in that directory. You
can also supply a wildcard file name pattern as the minibuffer
argument, in which case the Dired buffer lists all files matching
that pattern. The usual history and completion commands can be
used in the minibuffer; in particular, M-n puts the
name of the visited file (if any) in the minibuffer (see Minibuffer
History).
You can also invoke Dired by giving C-x C-f
(find-file) a directory name.
The variable dired-listing-switches specifies the
options to give to ls for listing the directory;
this string must contain ‘-l’.
If you use a prefix argument with the dired command,
you can specify the ls switches with the minibuffer
before you enter the directory specification. No matter how they
are specified, the ls switches can include short
options (that is, single characters) requiring no arguments, and
long options (starting with ‘--’) whose
arguments are specified with
‘=’.
If your ls program supports the
‘--dired’ option, Dired automatically
passes it that option; this causes ls to emit
special escape sequences for certain unusual file names, without
which Dired will not be able to parse those names. The first time
you run Dired in an Emacs session, it checks whether
ls supports the ‘--dired’
option by calling it once with that option. If the exit code is
0, Dired will subsequently use the
‘--dired’ option; otherwise it will not.
You can inhibit this check by customizing the variable
dired-use-ls-dired. The value
unspecified (the default) means to perform the
check; any other non-nil value means to use the
‘--dired’ option; and nil
means not to use the ‘--dired’
option.
On MS-Windows and MS-DOS systems, Emacs emulates
ls. See ls in
Lisp, for options and peculiarities of this
emulation.
To display the Dired buffer in another window, use C-x 4
d (dired-other-window). C-x 5 d
(dired-other-frame) displays the Dired buffer in a
separate frame.
Typing q (quit-window) buries the
Dired buffer, and deletes its window if the window was created
just for that buffer.
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