*For Question A***
In Icicles, C-x C-f is by default a multi-command. That means that when you complete to a set of file names:
You can act on (e.g. visit) multiple candidates, selectively (e.g. C-RET, C-mouse-2).
You can act on all files whose names match your current input -- e.g., visit them all.
The same is true for other Icicles file commands, including those that let you match an absolute file name, meaning that your minibuffer patterns can match not just the non-directory part of the file name but directory parts as well.
For example, C-x C-f with a prefix arg matches absolute file names. And M-x icicle-locate-file
does the same thing for all files under a given directory.
(You can always use a multi-command as an ordinary command: C-x C-f acts normally if you use RET or mouse-2. If you don't use the extra key bindings to act on multiple files then you'll never know the difference.)
See http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/Icicles_-_File-Name_Input
*For Question B***
What you want is Icicles search.
- Command
icicle-search-file
searches all files of a set you specify.
- Command
icicle-search-buffer
searches all buffers of a set you specify.
- Command
icicle-search
does both: files with a negative prefix arg, buffers with a non-negative prefix arg.
These commands let you specify a regexp to define the search contexts: the parts of the files or buffers that you want to search. For example, .*
means search each line.
After you define the search contexts you type some text in the minibuffer, and it narrows the candidate search contexts to those that match your text. You can hit M-SPC to combine multiple such patterns.
Then you can navigate to the selected search hits: C-RET or C-mouse-2 to visit, or cycle/visit using C-down. You can even sort the matching candidates in various ways, to compare them easily or to change the cycle order.
See http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/Icicles_-_Search_Commands%2c_Overview