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Most Emacs commands that operate on a file require you to specify the file name. (Saving and reverting are exceptions; the buffer knows which file name to use for them.) You enter the file name using the minibuffer (see section The Minibuffer). Completion is available, to make it easier to specify long file names. See section Completion.
For most operations, there is a default file name which is used if you type just RET to enter an empty argument. Normally the default file name is the name of the file visited in the current buffer; this makes it easy to operate on that file with any of the Emacs file commands.
Each buffer has a default directory, normally the same as the
directory of the file visited in that buffer. When you enter a file
name without a directory, the default directory is used. If you specify
a directory in a relative fashion, with a name that does not start with
a slash, it is interpreted with respect to the default directory. The
default directory is kept in the variable default-directory
,
which has a separate value in every buffer.
For example, if the default file name is `/u/rms/gnu/gnu.tasks' then the default directory is `/u/rms/gnu/'. If you type just `foo', which does not specify a directory, it is short for `/u/rms/gnu/foo'. `../.login' would stand for `/u/rms/.login'. `new/foo' would stand for the file name `/u/rms/gnu/new/foo'.
The command M-x pwd prints the current buffer's default
directory, and the command M-x cd sets it (to a value read using
the minibuffer). A buffer's default directory changes only when the
cd
command is used. A file-visiting buffer's default directory
is initialized to the directory of the file that is visited there. If
you create a buffer with C-x b, its default directory is copied
from that of the buffer that was current at the time.
The default directory actually appears in the minibuffer when the
minibuffer becomes active to read a file name. This serves two
purposes: it shows you what the default is, so that you can type
a relative file name and know with certainty what it will mean, and it
allows you to edit the default to specify a different directory.
This insertion of the default directory is inhibited if the variable
insert-default-directory
is set to nil
.
Note that it is legitimate to type an absolute file name after you enter the minibuffer, ignoring the presence of the default directory name as part of the text. The final minibuffer contents may look invalid, but that is not so. For example, if the minibuffer starts out with `/usr/tmp/' and you add `/x1/rms/foo', you get `/usr/tmp//x1/rms/foo'; but Emacs ignores everything through the first slash in the double slash; the result is `/x1/rms/foo'. See section Minibuffers for File Names.
`$' in a file name is used to substitute environment variables.
For example, if you have used the shell command `export
FOO=rms/hacks' to set up an environment variable named FOO
, then
you can use `/u/$FOO/test.c' or `/u/${FOO}/test.c' as an
abbreviation for `/u/rms/hacks/test.c'. The environment variable
name consists of all the alphanumeric characters after the `$';
alternatively, it may be enclosed in braces after the `$'. Note
that shell commands to set environment variables affect Emacs only if
done before Emacs is started.
To access a file with `$' in its name, type `$$'. This pair is converted to a single `$' at the same time as variable substitution is performed for single `$'. Alternatively, quote the whole file name with `/:' (see section Quoted File Names).
The Lisp function that performs the substitution is called
substitute-in-file-name
. The substitution is performed only on
file names read as such using the minibuffer.
You can include non-ASCII characters in file names if you set the
variable file-name-coding-system
to a non-nil
value.
See section Specifying a Coding System.
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