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RE: how to get list of visible buffers of current frame
From: |
Drew Adams |
Subject: |
RE: how to get list of visible buffers of current frame |
Date: |
Thu, 13 Nov 2008 11:40:24 -0800 |
> have You got idea on how to do this?
The fish: `C-h f get-buffer-window'
How to fish:
The Elisp manual is your friend (again).
`i' in the manual searches the index, with completion.
If you use Icicles, then completion works for any number of substrings (or
regexps) combined in any order. Example: `i window S-SPC buffer' shows the index
entries that contain both `window' and `buffer':
active-minibuffer-window
buffers, controlled in windows
fit-window-to-buffer
get-buffer-window
get-buffer-window-list
minibuffer window, and next-window
minibuffer windows
minibuffer-scroll-window
minibuffer-selected-window
minibuffer-window
minibuffer-window-active-p
other-window-scroll-buffer
replace-buffer-in-windows
same-window-buffer-names
set-minibuffer-window
set-window-buffer
shrink-window-if-larger-than-buffer
switch-to-buffer-other-window
window-buffer
window-minibuffer-p
If you want to narrow things further, typing `minibuffer ~' then removes the
entries that contain `minibuffer'. Among the remaining entries, any of the
following get you to the node `Buffers and Windows', which describes what you
want:
buffers, controlled in windows
get-buffer-window
get-buffer-window-list
set-window-buffer
window-buffer
That's if you start with the keywords `window' and `buffer'. Suppose you start
instead with `display' and `buffer'. Then you see these matching index entries:
buffer-display-count
buffer-display-table
buffer-display-time
display-buffer
display-buffer-function
display-buffer-reuse-frames
display-message-or-buffer
displaying a buffer
edebug-save-displayed-buffer-points
special-display-buffer-names
Of those, the following entries get you to the same node `Buffers and Windows':
buffer-display-count
buffer-display-time
In Icicles, you can just use `C-next'... to visit the matching entries in order,
or `next'... and then `C-RET' to visit only specific entries - all in the same
invocation of `i'.
Nothing is as helpful as Emacs onboard help. You owe it to yourself to learn to
use it.
And Icicles can help Emacs help you:
http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/Icicles_-_Nutshell_View
http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/Icicles_-_Info_Enhancements