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If you continue an Emacs session for a while, you may accumulate a large number of buffers. You may then find it convenient to kill the buffers you no longer need. On most operating systems, killing a buffer releases its space back to the operating system so that other programs can use it. Here are some commands for killing buffers:
kill-buffer
).
C-x k (kill-buffer
) kills one buffer, whose name you
specify in the minibuffer. The default, used if you type just
<RET> in the minibuffer, is to kill the current buffer. If you
kill the current buffer, another buffer becomes current: one that was
current in the recent past but is not displayed in any window now. If
you ask to kill a file-visiting buffer that is modified, then you must
confirm with yes before the buffer is killed.
The command M-x kill-some-buffers asks about each buffer, one
by one. An answer of y means to kill the buffer, just like
kill-buffer
. This command ignores buffers whose names begin
with a space, which are used internally by Emacs.
The command M-x kill-matching-buffers prompts for a regular
expression and kills all buffers whose names match that expression.
See Regexps. Like kill-some-buffers
, it asks for
confirmation before each kill. This command normally ignores buffers
whose names begin with a space, which are used internally by Emacs.
To kill internal buffers as well, call kill-matching-buffers
with a prefix argument.
The Buffer Menu feature is also convenient for killing various buffers. See Several Buffers.
If you want to do something special every time a buffer is killed, you
can add hook functions to the hook kill-buffer-hook
(see Hooks).
If you run one Emacs session for a period of days, as many people do, it can fill up with buffers that you used several days ago. The command M-x clean-buffer-list is a convenient way to purge them; it kills all the unmodified buffers that you have not used for a long time. An ordinary buffer is killed if it has not been displayed for three days; however, you can specify certain buffers that should never be killed automatically, and others that should be killed if they have been unused for a mere hour.
You can also have this buffer purging done for you, once a day,
by enabling Midnight mode. Midnight mode operates each day
at midnight; at that time, it runs clean-buffer-list
, or
whichever functions you have placed in the normal hook
midnight-hook
(see Hooks). To enable Midnight mode, use
the Customization buffer to set the variable midnight-mode
to
t
. See Easy Customization.