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N.5 Operating on Several Buffers

The buffer-menu facility is like a "Dired for buffers"; it allows you to request operations on various Emacs buffers by editing an Emacs buffer containing a list of them. You can save buffers, kill them (here called deleting them, for consistency with Dired), or display them.

M-x buffer-menu
Begin editing a buffer listing all Emacs buffers.

The command buffer-menu writes a list of all Emacs buffers into the buffer `*Buffer List*', and selects that buffer in Buffer Menu mode. The buffer is read-only, and can be changed only through the special commands described in this section. The usual Emacs cursor motion commands can be used in the `*Buffer List*' buffer. The following commands apply to the buffer described on the current line.

d
Request to delete (kill) the buffer, then move down. The request shows as a `D' on the line, before the buffer name. Requested deletions take place when you type the x command.
C-d
Like d but move up afterwards instead of down.
s
Request to save the buffer. The request shows as an `S' on the line. Requested saves take place when you type the x command. You may request both saving and deletion for the same buffer.
x
Perform previously requested deletions and saves.
u
Remove any request made for the current line, and move down.
DEL
Move to previous line and remove any request made for that line.

The d, C-d, s and u commands to add or remove flags also move down (or up) one line. They accept a numeric argument as a repeat count.

These commands operate immediately on the buffer listed on the current line:

~
Mark the buffer "unmodified." The command ~ does this immediately when you type it.
%
Toggle the buffer's read-only flag. The command % does this immediately when you type it.
t
Visit the buffer as a tags table. See section W.2.4 Selecting a Tags Table.

There are also commands to select another buffer or buffers:

q
Quit the buffer menu--immediately display the most recent formerly visible buffer in its place.
RET
f
Immediately select this line's buffer in place of the `*Buffer List*' buffer.
o
Immediately select this line's buffer in another window as if by C-x 4 b, leaving `*Buffer List*' visible.
C-o
Immediately display this line's buffer in another window, but don't select the window.
1
Immediately select this line's buffer in a full-screen window.
2
Immediately set up two windows, with this line's buffer in one, and the previously current buffer (aside from the buffer `*Buffer List*') in the other.
b
Bury the buffer listed on this line.
m
Mark this line's buffer to be displayed in another window if you exit with the v command. The request shows as a `>' at the beginning of the line. (A single buffer may not have both a delete request and a display request.)
v
Immediately select this line's buffer, and also display in other windows any buffers previously marked with the m command. If you have not marked any buffers, this command is equivalent to 1.

All that buffer-menu does directly is create and switch to a suitable buffer, and turn on Buffer Menu mode. Everything else described above is implemented by the special commands provided in Buffer Menu mode. One consequence of this is that you can switch from the `*Buffer List*' buffer to another Emacs buffer, and edit there. You can reselect the `*Buffer List*' buffer later, to perform the operations already requested, or you can kill it, or pay no further attention to it.

The only difference between buffer-menu and list-buffers is that buffer-menu switches to the `*Buffer List*' buffer in the selected window; list-buffers displays it in another window. If you run list-buffers (that is, type C-x C-b) and select the buffer list manually, you can use all of the commands described here.

The buffer `*Buffer List*' is not updated automatically when buffers are created and killed; its contents are just text. If you have created, deleted or renamed buffers, the way to update `*Buffer List*' to show what you have done is to type g (revert-buffer) or repeat the buffer-menu command.


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