You probably don't want to do this, since backups are useful, especially when something goes wrong.
To avoid seeing backup files (and other
“uninteresting” files) in Dired, load
dired-x by adding the following to your
.emacs file:
(add-hook 'dired-load-hook
(lambda ()
(require 'dired-x)))
With dired-x loaded, M-o toggles
omitting in each dired buffer. You can make omitting the default
for new dired buffers by putting the following in your
.emacs:
(add-hook 'dired-mode-hook 'dired-omit-toggle)
If you're tired of seeing backup files whenever you do an
‘ls’ at the
Unix shell, try GNU ls with the
‘-B’ option.
GNU ls is part of the GNU Fileutils package,
available from ‘ftp.gnu.org’ and its mirrors (see
Current
GNU distributions).
To disable or change the way backups are made, see Backup Names.
Beginning with
Emacs 21.1, you can control where Emacs puts backup files by
customizing the variable backup-directory-alist.
This variable's value specifies that files whose names match
specific patters should have their backups put in certain
directories. A typical use is to add the element ("."
. dir) to force Emacs to put
all backup files in the directory
dir.