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From: | Glenn Linderman |
Subject: | bug#32581: 24.4; make recover-file a prompt instead of a warning |
Date: | Fri, 12 Jul 2019 20:48:26 -0700 |
User-agent: | Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; WOW64; rv:60.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/60.8.0 |
On 7/12/2019 7:42 PM, Lars Ingebrigtsen
wrote:
Glenn Linderman <v+python@g.nevcal.com> writes:I have emacs open a certain large file at boot-time startup, because the Python mode takes so long to parse it. So I guess I forgot to save last night, did a windows shutdown, and this morning my work wasn't there... but while emacs probably gave the warning, it was probably wiped out by the next warning from the Python mode, and I don't sit there and watch my computer boot up. So by the time I noticed stuff from last night was missing, the recover file had been rewritten with the new edits.If I understand you correctly (and I may not), you're saying that when you open a Python file that has an auto-saved file, then Emacs says that an auto-saved file exists... and then Python mode issues a message that overwrites that message? What is that Python-mode message? I think you understood correctly. I'm not sure what version of which Python-mode I have, but could probably figure it out somehow (I love emacs, because it has extensions, but I'm not real good at writing or understanding elisp: I use other people's extensions, mostly, and a bit of cut-n-paste programming for a few more customizations). Probably the following message, that I get every time I open the file. "Warning: no abbrev-file found, customize `abbrev-file-name' in order to make mode-specific abbrevs work." And I find the following line in my .emacs file: (add-to-list 'load-path "d:/my/py/emacs/python-mode.el-6.1.1") |
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