Based upon the name of a file, Dired tries to guess what shell command you might want to apply to it. For example, if you have point on a file named foo.tar and you press !, Dired will guess you want to ‘tar xvf’ it and suggest that as the default shell command.
The default is mentioned in brackets and you can type M-n to get the default into the minibuffer and then edit it, e.g., to change ‘tar xvf’ to ‘tar tvf’. If there are several commands for a given file, e.g., ‘xtex’ and ‘dvips’ for a .dvi file, you can type M-n several times to see each of the matching commands.
Dired only tries to guess a command for a single file, never for a list of marked files.
dired-guess-shell-alist-defaultnil to turn
guessing off. The elements of
dired-guess-shell-alist-user (defined by the user)
will override these rules.dired-guess-shell-alist-usernil, a user-defined alist of file regexps
and their suggested commands. These rules take precedence
over the predefined rules in the variable
dired-guess-shell-alist-default (to which they
are prepended) when dired-do-shell-command is
run).
Each element of the alist looks like
(regexp command...)
where each command can either be a string or a Lisp expression that evaluates to a string. If several commands are given, all of them will temporarily be pushed onto the history.
If ‘*’ in the shell command, that means to substitute the file name.
You can set this variable in your ~/.emacs. For example, to add rules for ‘.foo’ and ‘.bar’ file extensions, write
(setq dired-guess-shell-alist-user
(list
(list "\\.foo$" "foo-command");; fixed rule
;; possibly more rules...
(list "\\.bar$";; rule with condition test
'(if condition
"bar-command-1"
"bar-command-2"))))
This will override any predefined rules
for the same extensions.
dired-guess-shell-case-fold-searcht
Non-nil means
dired-guess-shell-alist-default and
dired-guess-shell-alist-user are matched
case-insensitively.
dired-guess-shell-gnutarnil
If non-nil, this is the name of the GNU Tar
executable (e.g., ‘tar’ or ‘gnutar’). GNU Tar's
‘z’ switch
is used for compressed tar files. If you don't have GNU tar,
set this to nil: a pipe using
‘zcat’ is
then used.
dired-guess-shell-gzip-quiett
A non-nil value means that
‘-q’ is
passed to gzip overriding a verbose option in
the GZIP environment
variable.
dired-guess-shell-znew-switches nilnil
A string of switches passed to znew. An
example is ‘-K’ which will make
znew keep a .Z file when it is smaller than the
.gz file.
dired-shell-command-history nil