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Re: Reparsing local variables without reopening file?
From: |
Thomas F. Burdick |
Subject: |
Re: Reparsing local variables without reopening file? |
Date: |
22 Sep 2002 10:42:23 -0700 |
Ole Laursen <olau@hardworking.dk> writes:
> Hi
>
> I was changing a local variable for a test example when it occurred to
> me that I didn't know how to make Emacs reparse them. For example:
>
> // Local Variables: ***
> // compile-command: "g++ test.cpp -o test -O3" ***
> // End: ***
>
> Now, one can save and kill the buffer and refind the file (or perhaps
> even do a M-x revert-buffer); however, this seems silly. M-x apropos
> gives hack-local-variables. But that is a function? What do the gurus
> do? Or should hack-local-variables be a command (perhaps with a
> somewhat more descriptive name :-)? Typing M-: (hack-local-variables)
> is a little laborious.
Come to think of it, that would be a nice thing to have as a command,
wouldn't it? But hack-local-variables is the function that gets
called when you find-file a file, so you can just put this in your
.emacs:
(defun my-reparse-local-variables ()
(interactive)
(hack-local-variables))
(global-set-key ... #'my-reparse-local-varaibles)
--
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