Stéphane Senesi <[email protected]> writes: >>> I investigated further. The problem only appears when the path close >>> to the point is either an absolute path or a path with a tilde ~ : >>> - using 'emacs -Q', ffap erroneously (?) tries to find the file on >>> the local machine, and hence, for the case of an absolute path, >>> proposes to truncate the file path to the longest one which matches >>> the local file system >>> >> What happens, if you apply (require 'tramp) before? > > The same happens (still with '-Q') > Relative paths are OK
I'm sorry, but I still cannot reproduce it here. Could you, please, send me an example file and instruct me, at which position the cursor is located, when you call "M-x find-file-at-point". > S Best regards, Michael. _______________________________________________ Tramp-devel mailing list [email protected] https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/tramp-devel
