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You can insert subdirectories with specified ls
switches in Dired buffers using C-u i. You can change
the ls switches of an already inserted subdirectory
at point using C-u l.
Dired preserves the switches if you revert the buffer. Deleting a subdirectory forgets about its switches.
Using dired-undo (see Marks vs Flags) to
reinsert or delete subdirectories that were inserted with
explicit switches can bypass Dired’s machinery for
remembering (or forgetting) switches. Deleting a subdirectory
using dired-undo does not forget its switches. When
later reinserted using i, it will be reinserted using
its old switches. Using dired-undo to reinsert a
subdirectory that was deleted using the regular Dired commands
(not dired-undo) will originally insert it with its
old switches. Reverting the buffer, however, will relist it using
the buffer’s default switches. If any of this yields
problems, you can easily correct the situation using C-u
i or C-u l.
Dired does not remember the R switch. Inserting a
subdirectory with switches that include the R switch
is equivalent to inserting each of its subdirectories using all
remaining switches. For instance, updating or killing a
subdirectory that was inserted with the R switch
will not update or kill its subdirectories.
The buffer’s default switches do not affect subdirectories that were inserted using explicitly specified switches. In particular, commands such as s that change the buffer’s switches do not affect such subdirectories. (They do, however, affect subdirectories without explicitly assigned switches.)
You can make Dired forget about all subdirectory switches and relist all subdirectories with the buffer’s default switches using M-x dired-reset-subdir-switches. This also reverts the Dired buffer.
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