GNU bug report logs -
#32581
24.4; make recover-file a prompt instead of a warning
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Reported by: Glenn Linderman <v+python <at> g.nevcal.com>
Date: Thu, 30 Aug 2018 04:36:01 UTC
Severity: wishlist
Found in version 24.4
Done: Lars Ingebrigtsen <larsi <at> gnus.org>
Bug is archived. No further changes may be made.
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Message #17 received at submit <at> debbugs.gnu.org (full text, mbox):
On 13.07.19 15:35, Lars Ingebrigtsen wrote:
> Glenn Linderman <v+python <at> g.nevcal.com> writes:
>
>> 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."
> Right. Some modes are chatty at startup and hides warnings you're
> interested in.
>
> It's perfectly valid to not want to load an autosaved file, and making
> Emacs prompt would be an inconvenience, in my opinion.
>
> Perhaps Emacs should treat auto-saved files a bit more like what it does
> with files that have changed? I.e., if you try to edit a file with an
> auto-save file, it should prompt you something like "foo has auto save
> data; really edit the buffer?" or something?
>
> Would that make sense?
>
Hi,
python-mode.el developer here. As for the abbrev-file-name, assume
that's a general warning from Emacs.
Looking for the value of abbrev-file-name and creating a file of that
name if not existing should silence that warning.
Also auto-save issue seems not mode-related.
BTW bug-reports are welcome at
https://gitlab.com/python-mode-devs/python-mode/issues
Best,
Andreas
This bug report was last modified 3 years and 108 days ago.
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