To find a file in Emacs, you use the C-x C-f (find-file
)
command. This command is almost, but not quite right for the lengths
problem.
Let’s look at the source for find-file
:
(defun find-file (filename) "Edit file FILENAME. Switch to a buffer visiting file FILENAME, creating one if none already exists." (interactive "FFind file: ") (switch-to-buffer (find-file-noselect filename)))
(The most recent version of the find-file
function definition
permits you to specify optional wildcards to visit multiple files;
that makes the definition more complex and we will not discuss it
here, since it is not relevant. You can see its source using either
M-. (xref-find-definitions
) or C-h f
(describe-function
).)
The definition I am showing possesses short but complete documentation
and an interactive specification that prompts you for a file name when
you use the command interactively. The body of the definition
contains two functions, find-file-noselect
and
switch-to-buffer
.
According to its documentation as shown by C-h f (the
describe-function
command), the find-file-noselect
function reads the named file into a buffer and returns the buffer.
(Its most recent version includes an optional wildcards argument,
too, as well as another to read a file literally and another to
suppress warning messages. These optional arguments are irrelevant.)
However, the find-file-noselect
function does not select the
buffer in which it puts the file. Emacs does not switch its attention
(or yours if you are using find-file-noselect
) to the selected
buffer. That is what switch-to-buffer
does: it switches the
buffer to which Emacs attention is directed; and it switches the
buffer displayed in the window to the new buffer. We have discussed
buffer switching elsewhere. (See Switching Buffers.)
In this histogram project, we do not need to display each file on the
screen as the program determines the length of each definition within
it. Instead of employing switch-to-buffer
, we can work with
set-buffer
, which redirects the attention of the computer
program to a different buffer but does not redisplay it on the screen.
So instead of calling on find-file
to do the job, we must write
our own expression.
The task is easy: use find-file-noselect
and set-buffer
.