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There are two commands for exiting Emacs, and three kinds of exiting: iconifying Emacs, suspending Emacs, and killing Emacs.
Iconifying means replacing the Emacs frame with a small box or "icon" on the screen. This is the usual way to exit Emacs when you're using a graphical display--if you bother to "exit" at all. (Just switching to another application is usually sufficient.)
Suspending means stopping Emacs temporarily and returning control to its parent process (usually a shell), allowing you to resume editing later in the same Emacs job. This is the usual way to exit Emacs when running it on a text terminal.
Killing Emacs means destroying the Emacs job. You can run Emacs again later, but you will get a fresh Emacs; there is no way to resume the same editing session after it has been killed.
Suspend Emacs (suspend-emacs
) or iconify a frame
(iconify-or-deiconify-frame
).
Kill Emacs (save-buffers-kill-emacs
).
On graphical displays, C-z runs the command
iconify-or-deiconify-frame
, which temporarily iconifies (or
"minimizes") the selected Emacs frame (see section Frames and Graphical Displays). You can
then use the window manager to select some other application. (You
could select another application without iconifying Emacs first, but
getting the Emacs frame out of the way can make it more convenient to
find the other application.)
On a text terminal, C-z runs the command suspend-emacs
.
Suspending Emacs takes you back to the shell from which you invoked
Emacs. You can resume Emacs with the shell command %emacs
in most common shells. On systems that don't support suspending
programs, C-z starts an inferior shell that communicates
directly with the terminal, and Emacs waits until you exit the
subshell. (The way to do that is probably with C-d or
exit
, but it depends on which shell you use.) On these
systems, you can only get back to the shell from which Emacs was run
(to log out, for example) when you kill Emacs.
Suspending can fail if you run Emacs under a shell that doesn't
support suspendion of its subjobs, even if the system itself does
support it. In such a case, you can set the variable
cannot-suspend
to a non-nil
value to force C-z to
start an inferior shell.
To exit and kill Emacs, type C-x C-c
(save-buffers-kill-emacs
). A two-character key is used to make
it harder to type by accident. This command first offers to save any
modified file-visiting buffers. If you do not save them all, it asks
for confirmation with yes before killing Emacs, since any
changes not saved now will be lost forever. Also, if any subprocesses are
still running, C-x C-c asks for confirmation about them, since
killing Emacs will also kill the subprocesses.
If the value of the variable confirm-kill-emacs
is
non-nil
, C-x C-c assumes that its value is a predicate
function, and calls that function. If the result is non-nil
, the
session is killed, otherwise Emacs continues to run. One convenient
function to use as the value of confirm-kill-emacs
is the
function yes-or-no-p
. The default value of
confirm-kill-emacs
is nil
.
You can't resume an Emacs session after killing it. Emacs can, however, record certain session information when you kill it, such as which files you visited, so the next time you start Emacs it will try to visit the same files. See section Saving Emacs Sessions.
The operating system usually listens for certain special characters whose meaning is to kill or suspend the program you are running. This operating system feature is turned off while you are in Emacs. The meanings of C-z and C-x C-c as keys in Emacs were inspired by the use of C-z and C-c on several operating systems as the characters for stopping or killing a program, but that is their only relationship with the operating system. You can customize these keys to run any commands of your choice (see section Keymaps).
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