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The #, ~, ., % &, and % d commands flag many files for deletion, based on their file names:
Flag all auto-save files (files whose names start and end with ‘#’) for deletion (see Auto Save).
Flag all backup files (files whose names end with ‘~’) for deletion (see Backup).
Flag excess numeric backup files for deletion. The oldest and newest few backup files of any one file are exempt; the middle ones are flagged.
Flag for deletion all files with certain kinds of names which suggest you could easily create those files again.
Flag for deletion all files whose names match the regular expression regexp.
# (dired-flag-auto-save-files) flags
all files whose names look like auto-save files—that is,
files whose names begin and end with
‘#’. See Auto Save.
~ (dired-flag-backup-files) flags all
files whose names say they are backup files—that is, files
whose names end in ‘~’. See Backup.
. (period, dired-clean-directory)
flags just some of the backup files for deletion: all but the
oldest few and newest few backups of any one file. Normally, the
number of newest versions kept for each file is given by the
variable dired-kept-versions (not
kept-new-versions; that applies only when saving).
The number of oldest versions to keep is given by the variable
kept-old-versions.
Period with a positive numeric argument, as in C-u 3
., specifies the number of newest versions to keep,
overriding dired-kept-versions. A negative numeric
argument overrides kept-old-versions, using minus
the value of the argument to specify the number of oldest
versions of each file to keep.
% & (dired-flag-garbage-files)
flags files whose names match the regular expression specified by
the variable dired-garbage-files-regexp. By default,
this matches certain files produced by TeX,
‘.bak’ files, and the
‘.orig’ and
‘.rej’ files produced by
patch.
% d flags all files whose names match a specified
regular expression (dired-flag-files-regexp). Only
the non-directory part of the file name is used in matching. You
can use ‘^’ and
‘$’ to anchor matches. You can exclude
certain subdirectories from marking by hiding them while you use
% d. See Hiding
Subdirectories.
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