;;; dired-ranger-autoloads.el --- automatically extracted autoloads -*- lexical-binding: t -*- ;; ;;; Code: (add-to-list 'load-path (directory-file-name (or (file-name-directory #$) (car load-path)))) ;;;### (autoloads nil "dired-ranger" "dired-ranger.el" (0 0 0 0)) ;;; Generated autoloads from dired-ranger.el (autoload 'dired-ranger-copy "dired-ranger" "\ Place the marked items in the copy ring. With non-nil prefix argument, add the marked items to the current selection. This allows you to gather files from multiple dired buffers for a single paste. \(fn ARG)" t nil) (autoload 'dired-ranger-paste "dired-ranger" "\ Copy the items from copy ring to current directory. With raw prefix argument \\[universal-argument], do not remove the selection from the stack so it can be copied again. With numeric prefix argument, copy the n-th selection from the copy ring. \(fn ARG)" t nil) (autoload 'dired-ranger-move "dired-ranger" "\ Move the items from copy ring to current directory. This behaves like `dired-ranger-paste' but moves the files instead of copying them. \(fn ARG)" t nil) (autoload 'dired-ranger-bookmark "dired-ranger" "\ Bookmark current dired buffer. CHAR is a single character (a-zA-Z0-9) representing the bookmark. Reusing a bookmark replaces the content. These bookmarks are not persistent, they are used for quick jumping back and forth between currently used directories. \(fn CHAR)" t nil) (autoload 'dired-ranger-bookmark-visit "dired-ranger" "\ Visit bookmark CHAR. If the associated dired buffer was killed, we try to reopen it according to the setting `dired-ranger-bookmark-reopen'. The special bookmark `dired-ranger-bookmark-LRU' always jumps to the least recently visited dired buffer. See also `dired-ranger-bookmark'. \(fn CHAR)" t nil) (register-definition-prefixes "dired-ranger" '("dired-ranger-")) ;;;*** ;; Local Variables: ;; version-control: never ;; no-byte-compile: t ;; no-update-autoloads: t ;; coding: utf-8 ;; End: ;;; dired-ranger-autoloads.el ends here