21.7 Frame Commands
The following commands are used to delete and operate on frames:
C-x 5 0
¶
Delete the selected frame ( delete-frame
). This signals an
error if there is only one frame.
C-z
¶
Minimize (or iconify) the selected Emacs frame
( suspend-frame
). See Exiting Emacs.
C-x 5 o
¶
Select another frame, and raise it. If you repeat this command, it cycles through all the frames on your terminal.
C-x 5 1
¶
Delete all frames on the current terminal, except the selected one.
M-F10
¶
Toggle the maximization state of the current frame. When a frame is maximized, it fills the screen.
F11
¶
Toggle full-screen mode for the current frame. (The difference between full-screen and maximized is normally that the former hides window manager decorations, giving slightly more screen space to Emacs itself.)
Note that with some window managers you may have to customize the
variable frame-resize-pixelwise
to a non- nil
value in
order to make a frame truly maximized or full-screen. This
variable, when set to a non- nil
value, in general allows
resizing frames at pixel resolution, rather than in integral multiples
of lines and columns.
The C-x 5 0
( delete-frame
) command deletes the selected
frame. However, it will refuse to delete the last frame in an Emacs
session, to prevent you from losing the ability to interact with the
Emacs session. Note that when Emacs is run as a daemon (see Using Emacs as a Server), there is always a virtual frame that remains after all
the ordinary, interactive frames are deleted. In this case, C-x 5 0
can delete the last interactive frame; you can use
emacsclient
to reconnect to the Emacs session.
The C-x 5 1
( delete-other-frames
) command deletes all
other frames on the current terminal (this terminal refers to either a
graphical display, or a text terminal; see Non-Window Terminals).
If the Emacs session has frames open on other graphical displays or
text terminals, those are not deleted.
The C-x 5 o
( other-frame
) command selects the next
frame on the current terminal. If you are using Emacs on the X Window
System with a window manager that selects (or gives focus to)
whatever frame the mouse cursor is over, you have to change the
variable focus-follows-mouse
to t
in order for this
command to work properly. Then invoking C-x 5 o
will also warp
the mouse cursor to the chosen frame.