I want to make a function that will ask the user for the path to a file, and then do some stuff depending if the file exists or not. I know about the (interactive "s")
, and I tried using it, but, pressing TAB doesn't suggest possible path names.
How can I prompt for a path, and store it in a variable?
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3 Answers
With interactive, you should use f
for an existing filename, or in your case, F
for a possibly non-existent one:
(defun foo (filename)
(interactive "F")
(if (file-exists-p filename)
...
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4Also worth noting; if you want a prompt, just tack it right on to the interactive format string:
(interactive "FFile: ")
– jrockwayAug 11, 2011 at 1:14
The following code shows how you could do this (replace the error sexps with code to handle scenario where file exists or not):
(defun do-stuff-with-file (filename)
"Do stuff with a file."
(interactive (list (read-file-name "Do stuff with file: ")))
(when (file-exists-p filename)
(error "%s already exists" filename))
(when (not (file-exists-p filename))
(error "%s doesn't exist" filename)))
The function you're looking for is read-file-name
. Try pressing C-h f and enter read-file-name
to read the documentation.
Here's some example code that reads a file name:
(defun foo ()
(interactive)
(setq file (read-file-name "File: "))
(message "You chose: %s" file))
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No, you want @scottfrazer's answer. Don't reimplement Emacs inside Emacs just because you can't M-x describe-function interactive :)– jrockwayAug 11, 2011 at 1:13